To sum it up again from history.
Spitfire I vs Me 109E ......on par
Spitfire V vs Me 109F....Spit slightly better if anything
Spitfire Mk IX vs Me 109G2/G6 Spitfire slightly better, increasingly over 19.000 feet
Spitfire XIV vs Me 109 G10.....Spitfire better.
This is what the pilots said. Please post anything you find that indicates the opposite.
Those aircraft being rather closely on par with engine power have a difference rather in favour of the Spitfire, so I at least would point my finger at the wing rather than thrust-to-weight or prop blades etc etc. to explain the difference between the two.
There must be a good equation somewhere to be able to get at least a close guess at climb rate from the input data "wing area, weight and thrust" rather than just weight to thrust as Niklas used in the beginning. Does anyone have it? ??
And now to the "Much superior wing of the 109"
Niklas:
"I really wondered myself when someone brings up the unique "the elliptical wing explains everything" argument. Actually the wing of the 109 was much superior. The wing of the spit can described by only 2 words: wing area. Lot of wing area, that´s all. No slats, cannons and guns in the wing, only one setting for flaps.. actually a very primitive wing. Nevertheless it can achieve with a very gentle slow speed handling the lift coefficients of a 109 that uses slats and has no disturbing weapons in the wing(same for Tempest, Typhoon), but i already said that i consider RAF planes the most overmodelled ones in the set. The naca test says the spit had a surpisingly low CL btw, and this was a wing with 8*30. Installing the large cannons booms reduced cl by another 2-5% for sure!
What remains for the 109 is the poorer arment of only one central mounted cannon....and even dispersion is very close to that of a spit where the cannons are mounted far outside in a rather "soft" environment (wing)... ahh i better stop... "
Well...
Here comes an educated lesson in the superiority of an elliptical wing platform:
"The benefit in flight is significant. The amost perfect spanwise distribution of lift combined with the small wingtips reduces induced drag.
This means that the aircraft can maneuvre without substantial loss of performance.
Conversely, an aircraft with straight, constant section wings has a very highinduced drag. It may be fast but it slows when it turns..................
.............................
......The significance of this induced drag is illustrated by the Avions Mudry CAP 10 with its elliptical wing. Although relatively low powered, it can complete an aerobatic sequence without loss off altitude and, if managed properly, can even climb throughout."
(AEROBATICS, principles and practice by David Robson)
So.....an elliptical wing is no laughing matter....it is a seriously superior design in aerodynamic terms. Furthermore, the Spitfire wing was STRONGER than the one of the 109. And finally, regarding the issue of loading guns into it, That was because it was intended to take guns. Although not intended to take the 20mm originally, it could. However, the Wing of the 109 had "structural?" problems with that, so apart from the 109E, the 109 was not loaded with wing mounted guns.
The Spitfire could however have been loaded with more guns near center (cowling, pods or hub) had the designs demanded that. Remember that the reason that the .303's were wing mounted in the first place was that in that way they were able to deliver the maximum fire output, uninterrupted by the engine RPM.
So, what do we yet have in favour of the 109 wing? Well, the slats. Well, that is one double edged sword. For while the inferiority of the 109 wing near the stall could be compensated withg slats, they proved rather a nuicance in combat. In wild maneuvers, turbulences etc the slats were prone to slam out when they were not supposed to resulting in many a pilot having them "fixed" resulting in worse stall behaviour while other aspects remained more predictable.
BTW, weren't the slats originally from Handley-Page...a brithish design,,,,,
So, to sum it up, I have not been able to find any field in which the 109 wing was superior. Apart from the ease of manifacture of course....
Well...there will be some flames...looking forward.
