I am not writing a book on fighter combat - it is the History of the 355th from WWII through Vietnam and Afghanistan. I wrote and published Angels, Bulldogs and Dragons 27 years ago and have compiled a great deal of information since then including all the Macrs and encounter reports - biggest issue for me is that they are still on microfilm. I am contemplating converting them to DVD when I win the lottery
As to anybody who has never flown combat it would be silly to expound on the subject - with or without simulator experience. You and I may debate the aero stuff as you choose but I have no outright argument with your comments above other than waxing poetic to weight your POV.. i do the same
I know this book! I've read it, perhaps 15 years ago. I stumbled upon it in our public library and was quite surprised that they had it. It must have been purchased via a special request at some point. (our library is terrific at filling special requests). They recently purchased Jim Hornfisher's Neptune's Inferno when I simply asked if they had it.
Anyway, I recall it to be an excellent work.
I'll PM you with some info on joining our Military and Aviation writers groups. Just about everyone you may know, or read is involved.
Oh, and yes, I certainly do some waxing.....

I've been flying Aces High for about 10 years... A long time, I suppose.
My background is Naval Aviation (bouncing fixed wing off of CVs, hauling people and cargo). I have written for several magazines, museums, websites and did some ghost writing for other authors who simply had too much on their plate. In addition, I worked with Bodie for several years, after Jeff Ethell's death. Warren was not the diplomatic type, and his many falling-outs with other writers and publishers is almost legendary. Some of our disagreements were epic...

These disagreements were invariably about projects, not content. Warren tended to bounce from project to project. This would get me nuts, as I would do much of the background work, only to have Warren tell me he wants to take on a different project. Finally, while I still retained some sanity, I said enough was enough. I guess the killer was our aborted book, "A Mighty Fortress". Warren had purchased the rights to Pete Bowers, "Fortress in the Sky". Warren wanted to do a full re-write, with many more photos. I was tasked with doing the re-write, Warren would handle the photos and captions. I was just beginning my third draft, had done some of the layout and designed the dust jacket, when Warren announced that he thought there was a glut of B-17 books on the market and decided to put the project on the back burner. I was more than a little upset... I had more than six months invested in writing and much travel doing research. That, and his blow-up with Flight Journal (which scuttled three magazine articles) put an end to our association.
Well, it certainly is a pleasure having you posting to this board. I'm sure we will agree much more than disagree..
Now, as to the performance of the 109G-6 at 30,000 feet. It was far less than that of the P-47.
The 109G-6, configured for bomber interception, can attain 348 mph TAS (213 mph IAS), at 2,600 RPM and 0.96 ATA. It's a little faster with Emergency power, but barely pulls 1.1 ATA. Compare that to the P-47D-11, which attains 426 mph TAS (261 mph IAS) at 2,700 with 52" MAP. That's a 78 mph difference. At 32,000 feet, the disparity is even worse. The bigger problem for the 109 is, it can't pull more than 2g for no more than 45 degrees of turn before it begins a stall buffet. On the other hand, the P-47 can pull more than 4g before it begins to object. Huge difference. It simply means that if the 109 doesn't get the nose down fast, the P-47 will easily turn inside of it. At 30k, the P-47 climbs faster, accelerates quicker, turns much better and is much faster than the 109G-6. As I said, a 109G-6 has no business picking a fight with a P-47 at 30k. With equal pilots, the 109G-6 is toast waiting for the grape jelly.