Sturm what info are you looking for? Because I have just about everything you could want scanned and on the net for the Ta152, the Fw190A8, and some info on the D9 and D11/D12. All of which are original factory test documents or translations of original factory test documents.
Westy is correct. Its an urban legend that the Ta152 flew "top cover" for Me262's. Now there may have been Dora's assigned to that duty, I honestly don't know. But the Ta152's did not. Common sense and historical documents show that it didn't happen.
And even if the Ta152's did, the maximum number that were combat available at any one time was 13, and typically there were only 7-8 planes operational at any one time. Seven or Eight planes (or even thirteen if you want to be generous) will not make any significant difference to what is going on in an airbattle the size of the Western front in the last 6-8 months of the war.
What we are saying is that the story about Kurt Tank could be completely true, but it in no way is applicable to our Flight Models in Aces High without knowing a whole lot more data.
And your right, anyone who knows much about aircraft will tell you that it was not a supermans airplane, at least not in all regards in all situations. I will agree its a supermans airplane at high altitude fighting where it was designed to be its best. But engineering design is about tradeoffs. And to get the Ta152 to be very effective at high altitudes, it has to make tradeoffs against its low altitude performance.
In my opinon, the late mark Spitfires, the MkXIV and possibly the Mk XXII, were probably the best all around "pure fighters" (in regards to AH) designed and put into combat operations during the war. And even that is very debateable.
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Vermillion
**MOL**, Men of Leisure