"Alright but don't get all moody and defensive now, it's just an interesting discussion"
Thanks for a condescending start but I rarely burn my fuse over these thinks unlike some other people here.
"It's arguable whether the rear armament is worth the weight and drag penalty in the first place (second crew member notwithstanding). I think that DeHavilland demonstrated this with the Mosquito design (better to strip that out and run with the extra speed). But if you're going to insist on having defensive armament then you'd be hard pushed to find a more convoluted solution. Splitting the weapons on either side of the fuselage ensures that you halve the armament available for any shots apart from those where the attacking aircraft is directly in the same plane as you. The whole barbette solution is essentially a remote controlled turret, mounted in ridiculous proximity to the cockpit. I don't know what the total weight of the whole assembly including control and electrical system was but I imagine it was quite a lump, hideously complex to manufacture and maintain and not really bringing an awful lot to the party over a pair of very lightweight flexible mounts, say."
Arguable indeed. When we look at the design choices made to give the 410 "Hornet" its "sting" it has to be considered a very clean low drag design the only negative factor being the weight. As I already pointed out pilots rather had the rear gunner than the added performance given by 30 minutes of GM-1 endurance -and it was not a small boost!
Hideously complex? They made hideously complex "kommandogerät" to thousands of FW190s during the war, I doubt the gun system was even that complex. Also like I have pointed out I think the 410 gun barbette is almost useless in this game either due to ridiculous vibration when firing or ineffectiveness of MG131. I have lit the noses of several LA7s within 200yds without ANY effect whatsoever.
"With the flaps and the radiators the designers failed to take advantage of the twin engine format and basically duplicated all the disadvantages of a single liquid-cooled fighter. The Mosquito and some other designs with this format reduce drag a lot by plonking the rads in an inner split wing section. They also decided to use a low profile nacelle as it merges with the wing presumably to facilitate the plain flap format which forced them to use a rotating main leg instead of using a deeper nacelle and exploiting that for both a simplified landing gear and also a superior flap solution. Again more unnecessary complexity from a poor design decision and more weight (a common theme)."
Do you have any figures or explanations to offer how much superior the radiator was in the Mossie than that of standard recessed MT design? It has already been conluded that the problem with surface radiators (as in Spitty) the boundary layer makes part of the radiator ineffective and this is for the large part negated in MT recessed radiator where the boundary layer does not enter the radiator also giving the radiator smaller drag surface seen from the front. Apart from boundary layer effect negation the radiator needs a certain area to be effective and when it does what it does it
always creates drag. How was this any better than that of 410? Besides first Mossies came with a small engine nacelle but more about that later.
"With a pair of those very powerful engines you should expect a very high speed but it's mediocre compared to its peers (you guys say), this implies a high drag shape, it's reasonably transitional in form so probably the juxtaposition of nacelles and fuselage conspire against it (in addition to the radiators etc.) to make a very poor overall aerodynamic form. This is a stark contrast to the Mosquito say which is very clean and simply 'looks right' (<-- a very good metric even in today's computer rich environment)."
No. One part of the problem is the wing profile used which is NACA 23018, an 18% thickness profile which gives the wing good lift qualities even in low speed and high start weight. Up high where the drag is lower the wing is too small (except when the armament is light) so the induced drag is also high but as it happens the FTH of DB603 is around 20k so at that height the aircraft should perform pretty well. As there is plenty of PS available and a thick wing +slats you would expect the manuverability to be pretty good at large AoA. Well, according to Mosq's chart this is not so in Allies High. You can also compare the lift qualities to, say, Tiffie, Hurricane and BW which all have a thick airfoil to get a grip what qualities a thick wing has -yet 410 handling radically differs from these aircraft even if it has slats and the other examples do not.
Me410 also has a large rudder when compared to that of Mossie yet of those two the Mossie is more stable in slow flight, even if they had to make the engine nacelles longer due to stability issues after the intial patch of Mossies AND it had a 13% wing profile without slats! Mossie gets another free lunch there.
410 compresses after 400 mph. Where did that come from? In 410s life early on the field considered the dive brakes to be useless and suggested removing them totally from the design to speed up the production. This was not done even later on in majority of the new planes. If the 410, plane capable of divebombing, had a serious problem with compression would the field units suggest the removal of dive brakes? Add that to Mossie's free lunches.
"It very much looks like the sort of design that emerges from an overly large design team / committee perhaps with conflicting interests. It's as if different factions were all vying to have their ideas incorporated which totally removes the holistic quality of a design. Contrast this to DeHavilland's rather clean design process or even an earlier instantiation of the Messerschmitt design team itself which brings me to the final point the structure:"
According to history of 410 that is not how it happened. However there were other, some more competent, designs around the same time so 410 design did have potent competition. Why 410 won then? Maybe it was due to old Willy's good relations to Nazi party?
These aircraft, 410/Mossie, also have a different philosophy behind their designs. Me 410 is a light bomber, dive bomber and a "heavy zerstörer" to be used against bombers. Mossie was used as a light bomber and an attack aircraft (despite the liquid cooled engines) and later on as a (night) fighter and intruder.
All in all while I'm happy that 410 is finally in this game I think the way it is modelled gives a false idea what was the actual potential of the design.
-C+
PS. Almost forgot:
