I have. I'll summarize yet again.
1. You feel that max flap-deployment speed for aircraft in AH is too high.
2. You have no data giving flap-deployment speeds that contradict AH.
3. You say that, because you haven't found a pilot's statement of flaps failing at higher speeds, this supports your claim. (That is incorrect reasoning because the absence of an example is not at all a counterexample. Just because you can't find statements of "X > Y" does not imply that X < Y. It can still be >, =, or < Y.)
4. You seem to think that, because forces on flaps are lower at lower deflections, this helps validate your claim. (That is incorrect. First, AH already models lower force on lower deflections, the proof of it being that deploying one notch of flaps happens at higher speeds than deploying more than one notch of flaps. Second, this says nothing about what the low-deflection flap-deployment speed should be.)
5. You seem to think that all planes should have about the same flap deployment speeds. (That is incorrect. Different mechanisms, even for the same flap area, will have different strengths. Some planes will be able to deploy flaps at a higher speed, or higher forces if you want me to talk about it that way, than others because they certainly do not all have the same internal designs for actuator mechanisms. This is about as straightforward as realizing why all WWII fighter planes didn't have the same stick pull per g of effect, the same roll rate, the same Vne, the same max g, etc.)
Please feel free to tell me if you actually don't think 4 and 5. I can't tell on some things because you don't tend to answer direct questions directly.
I generally don't see that level of bald-faced fabrication outside of politics.
There are, however -- posting in this topic and for certain -- people with substantial experience and backgrounds in engineering, physics, aerodynamics, and mathematical and computational modeling who disagree with you.
1; nope never said that, or at least never meant to communicate that. What I said is that the low deflection FDS are too low on most FMs in AH, And that if the low deflection FDS are not specifically stated in the POH, HTC's apparent preferred source, that the unlisted speeds could be easily calculated using the calculated force loads calculated from the "known" or in this case POH stated deflection/s safe FDS.
2; since the accepted data is limited to one type of source in this case, no I can not produce safe deployment speed statements for deflection angles that the publishers of the documents did not include. Otoh neither can HTC, yet he does so anyway, just at substantially lower speeds than a lot of other sources of data and or information would put them.
3; the absence of reports of a problem, is strong evidence that there was no problem. Especially when fighter pilots are involved.
4; my point is that since the wind forces are the same, and the flap is the same, then the relationship between the flaps and the wind forces should be the same.
5; no, flaps are different size, type, have different max deflection angles, and or a deflection angle settings, all will result in different FDS for different aircraft. However (and this is what you are not getting) the relationship between deflection angle and airspeed and force should be the same. The reason is this simple, each flap system does not change shape, size, or structural integrity in its deployment process. What changes is its deflection angle into the airflow. The limiting factor is the structural integrity of the device. It takes much more air speed to reach the structural integrity limit at 1/10 it's fully deployed setting then it would at 10/10 it's fully deployed setting. That is what is the same that relationship. whatever the specific angle and speeds may be for each specific flap system the relationship should be the same (or I should say so similar as to make very little difference) I.e. if plane 1 can deploy 45 degrees of flaps at x speed and 5 degrees of flaps at 4x speed safely, then any aircraft that can deploy 45 degrees and 5 degrees should be able to use the same factors of what ever is their safe 45 and 5 degree speed, say z and 4z.
furthermore 10 - 20 degrees of deflection results in so low a force on a flap structure that that range would pretty much be available at any speed these aircraft are capable of achieving, so to deny the vast majority of aircraft with the capability to deploy 20 degrees or less until below the speed that the landing gear can be deployed is as far from realistic as one can get.
Last time I played il2 FDS was @ 300ias for most planes with low deflection flap settings, ask anyone who knows about 10 degrees of flaps vs 60 degrees and safe deployment speeds and se what they say.
Funny all I see here is you and all you do is ask for "data" and when I provide some all you do is go to extreme amounts of supposition to attempt to refute it. Where is your army of experts that say flaps get weaker at lower deflection angles?