Originally posted by JG5_Jerry:
Note that the 190 that was used was pretty worn out.
Worn out? each time they tried to climb the 190 to 33.000 feet the engine STOPPED!!
The BMW 801D on that A5 must have been a piece of crap in form of a radial engine.
Still the plane outclimbed its competitors in most of the situations, showed faster than both planes at most altitudes (clearly this is not what is seen in AH). And the report notes repeatedly the extreme simplicity of control of the Fw190, while the F4U and F6F were more complicated to work with. (In AH every plae is EXTREMELY simple to fly, with kommandogerat
)
I'd give that report partial credibility. Not full because the 190 was clearly in a poor state, and I really am surprised with the speed comparations.
Still,says something we all know. The Fw190 did everything better, or comparable, than the F6F and F4U except stallfighting or very close turning.
Still the americans preferred their rides? huhmmm
. Reminds me the 1940 tests by the RAF of a 109E4 and the Luftwaffe tests of a Spitfire...
The RAF testers concluded that the 109E was complicated to fly, and generally inferior to their Spitfire I
The LW testers (moelders included) concluded that the Spitfire I was notably inferior to the 109E4.
And we all know that both planes were equals
Morale?...depends on the tester, the final conclussion is subjective. I bet that if that comparisons had been done in Germany, the conclusion by the LW tester pilots would've been "they are good planes but the 190 is better
"
Note the 'no trim tabs' issue with 190!
No, no no...no "no trim tabs"...FIXED trim tabs. The groud crews fixed them for a determined speed, and there they remained. It was never a disadvantage,as you can read, because the stick forces were extremely light and so the need for trimming was almost none.
Note too that the whole tail stab section was MOVABLE, making the hole stabilizator actue as a trim tab.
[This message has been edited by RAM (edited 01-12-2001).]