Bea, Bea, Bea, Whirlwind
Lately I can't sleep because I've been worrying about the Whirlwind
True she's a beaut, how can two engines not be fun, perfect armament and visibility, am/fm radio and electric windows etc. BUT...
All of the
subjective comments regarding it's wonderful handling, especially its stability at slow speeds aside the wing loading still seems a little high at over 40 lb/ft². Even though reports suggest it was more than a match for the early 109s, they could just mean in terms of speed etcetera, which was after all apparently the obsession of the day.
My current favourite that we actually have in Aces High, the Nakajima Ki-84-Ia is around the 35 lb/ft² mark. Why I bring that plane up is because they both have similar flaps which increase wing area when deployed. Even the Nakajima's wing loading looks on the high side compared to other aircraft that I know I can compete with in a close in manoeuvring fight (again slow speed stability and turn radius playing an important role).
My question is: given the Whirlwind has that truly enormous Fowler flap (please refer to the video in my previous post) which extends for perhaps more than two thirds of its 45 ft wingspan, as well as manual slats, could we expect a similar improvement in turning radius at slow speeds than the (relatively) high wing loading suggests?
Can you calculate or rather estimate an adjusted wing loading with the flap deployed? Is there a rough way to work out the increased lift?
Are any of the mathematically minded, aerodynamically knowledgeable players interested enough to furnish an explanation to a humble student with dyscalculia but a genuine interest?