What are the gear ratios? I assume 1:10 and 1:15 or so.
I remeber seeing 5.5 and 8, but I can't remeber where.
The LF version had a Merlin66 engine that produced with +18ata 1700hp. The report mentions some improvments, so maybe power output was even higher.
I have seen peak output quoted for the Merlin 66 as 1670hp or 1760hp. That looks like a misunderstanding to me, but could be a genuine power difference.
Anyway, let it be 350mph for the spit14 - no problem here from my side.
It's not a question of let it be. You can't come up with a way of working out performance, and when the result is too low say ok I'll agree it's more, and expect your model to be accurate. If your model shows 335, and you don't want to accept that, your model doesn't work properly.
Your calculations show 335mph at sea level for a Spit XIV with FTH of 12,200ft in MS gear. That is the same speed as a Spit LF IX. That suggests to me an error in your method.
Again, a change of 4,600ft in FTH in the Merlin produced a speed difference of 5 - 7mph.
Your figures show a difference in FTH of 7000ft in the Griffon producing a speed difference of 28 mph. I find that impossible to believe.
Climbrate: The spit14 has at low altitudes roughly 200hp more power. Actually a bit less. This is 12% more power (actually only 11.7) compared to 1700hp, but it has 13% more weight. So power to weight ratio got worse. No contradiction to my theory, in opposite, climbrates up to 5000ft/min of the spit14 becomes more and more questionable for a "normal" spit14 and favour my theorie that those tests were done with griffons doing 2200hp or even more.
The LF IX had around 1700hp at 7,000ft (FTH). ROC was 4700ft/min. Weight 7485lbs.
The XIV had 2000hp at 9000ft. ROC was nearly the same. Weight was 8400lbs.
That gives the Spit XIV 4.2lbs/hp, and the LF IX 4.25lbs/hp if you assume 1760, 4.48lbs/hp if you assume 1670hp.
Those figures seem in line to me.
That the spit LF equipped with a lower MF gear ratio (spit 354) was SLOWER than the Merlin66 equipped spit surprised even the engineers obviously:
".It is a matter of interest that at sea level, Spitfire BS.354 with the RM-9SM engine, although nominally develping 50 B.H.P. more power than the Merlin 66 engines BS.543, is 7 m.p.h. slower, indicating either that the nominal powers were not realized and/or that there was a considerable difference between the drags of the two aircraft."
BUT this DOES confirm my theory. Why does the RM-9SM produce 50hp more power ehh? lower critical altiutde my friend This does exactly confirm my theory!
This is getting bizarre.
A plane that is supposed to have more power, but doesn't seem to have more power, confirms your theory?
If BS 354's odd performance was down to drag, presumably climb would not be so affected. However, it was badly affected with BS354 trailing well behind in climb rates as well.
In fact, BS354 seemed to have similar climb performance in FS gear, indicating it had less power in MS gear, not more.
In other words, their theory being wrong confirms your wrong theory as well?
, climbrates up to 5000ft/min of the spit14 becomes more and more questionable for a "normal" spit14 and favour my theorie that those tests were done with griffons doing 2200hp or even more.
Okay, now I have real problems.
Why would they try to hide the fact if the Griffon was producing 2200hp or more?
If a Griffon could be run at 2200hp at 18lbs boost, I would think they would acknowledge that fact, and make them all that way.
Secondly, a Spit LF IX doing 4700ft/min has a lbs/hp ratio of 4.48 to 1.
A Spit XIV with 2200hp would have a lbs/hp ratio of 3.81 to 1.
A Spit XIV with 2050hp (usuall quoted figure) would have a ratio of 4.09.
In other words, assuming it wasn't all some giant conspiracy, and using the figures published, the Spit XIV should be much better than the IX anyway.
The other point is that a 2200hp Spit should go faster than 363 at sea level.
If a 1500hp Spit IX can do 335, you think that 46% more power would only get you 8.4% more speed?
Which Spit figures do you disbelieve, and which do you believe?