Do you think that the pilots that flew these test
flights lied about their results to impress their superior officers.
Not at all! But I do think that any variance in the results is due to some *reason* that is up to the engineers to find and is irrelevant in a simulation. These reasons for lack of climb rate or differences in reported stall speeds or whatever, are not given in flight test reports for the most part and unless the person analyzing the report can fill in the holes, it's of little value in designing a simulation which is entirely based on numbers that have to make sense all of the time.
I can e-mail you or fax you the Grumman physics
model of the F6F-3 before it flew.
Please do! I would be interested in seeing that.
Also explain why the Vought engineers went to the trouble of
designing an airplane with bent wings and special landing gear just to fit an
extra large propeller on it if there was to be no gain in performance?
Well, to be honest, there was no performance advantage to building it with 'bent wings'. The P-47 didn't need bent wings nor did the Bearcat or Hellcat. The wings had to bend that way anyway for carrier ops and forward visibility was slightly improved (they needed all the help in that area they could get). The wing had 3% more surface area (drag) than it really needed, compared to if it were a straight wing. In the NACA report, they state that the gaps created between the wing panels had an adverse effect on the max lift coefficient as compared to the Hellcat.
A little cranky today? Did you break your favorite calculator or something?
Sorry I may have sounded that way, but really was not attacking you personally, only trying to provide a counterpoint in a hurry!

I'm pretty happy, I got my DVDrom working smoothly, so now I can watch my Roaring Glory Warbirds videos!!