@buzzbait
I would suggest you do some more research on the Tempest
itīs not so easy buzzbait. Look at funkedīs chart, so many different engines. And i canīt see a 2180hp number there, but a 2090hp number

(normal power)
In addition, the British did not test the Mustang III with the rear fuselage 85 gallon tank full.
This is no surprise to me. The P51 was close to instabillity with this fuel tank. Impossible to do real manoevering with this fuel tank.
The Tempest was a much cleaner aircraft than the Focke Wulf 190, it was able to get much more out of a unit of horsepower than the German aircraft
With all respect, are you blind? Canīt you see this huge oilcooler under the nose?? Clean design - LOL. And even with this huge oil cooler, the sabre engines suffered from overheating....
And a FW190D needed 2240hp for 375mph, the Tempest with a thin laminar wing (!!) was as fast with the same horsepower (sabre IIa +9 boost), 378mph with 2235 HP.
If you look at funkedīs chart, you can see that the sabre also got itīs power from the boost. With +10 or +12 boost, it used smiliar boosts like usual german engines. Of course did the engine run very fast - almost the same volume like a Jumo engine, but 24cylinder instead of 12 for the Jumo. The volumes and sizes of the components were smaller, which allowed higher RPM. On the other hand, the Sabre was a lot heavier and used a lot more fuel.
The really interesting point is that the Sabre engine didnīt had usual valves for the cylinder inlets and outlets, but used some "slides-technics" (donīt know how to explain it

)
When the tempest was +50mph faster than the A4, then you know which power setting was used for the A4...
And yes i compare sustained turn rates. Another good hint that the Typhoon was slightly better. Was the Typhoon a good turnfighter?
@vermillion
Yes. And from the link in this page i got the AFDU test results.
@funked
It makes perfect sense DOA.
Youīre right, but the initial climbrate is imo too good. Well a test pilot canīt test a sustained climbrate near sealevel

(initial climbrates from flight tests are often excellent, maybe theyīre the result of a little zoom climb at the beginning?? )
niklas