Badboy, I suppose this is without flaps? With flaps included, I expect the extra horses of the M to give an even more pronounced advantage.
Hi Bozon
Yes, that was without flaps. The turning performance of the P-47M across the full range of flaps for both instantaneous and sustained turns is shown in the diagrams below.
For most of the P-47 series of aircraft, while the turn radius gets smaller as flaps are lowered, the sustained turn rate deteriorates. However, the P-47M is the exception, and in the configuration analysed below, you can see that there is an improvement in both radius and instantaneous turn rate upto 2 notches of flaps. The maximum sustained turn occurs with 1 notch of flaps, but with 2 notches of flaps the sustained turn rate is only slightly worse, but with a significant improvement in radius, so overall the optimum turning configuration for the P-47M is with 2 notches of flaps.
You can see in this first diagram that the maximum instantaneous turn rate occurs with 2 notches of flaps, however it is important to remember that the benefit of instantaneous turn performance is only short lived because speed will drop rapidly to the sustained turning situation illustrated in the second diagram.
In the second diagram below you can see that the maximum sustained turn actually occurs with one notch of flaps, but at two notches the radius is better for only a slight loss in rate, which is why I said before that 2 notches are the optimal configuration for a two circle fight... in a one circle fight of course you would go full flaps.
The bottom line here is that if you are trying maximise your turn rate and radius in a two circle fight (that is turning nose to tail) then you want to be between 1 and 2 notches of flaps, while if you are in a one circle fight (that is turning nose to nose) you should go full flaps.
Hope that helps...
Badboy