Originally posted by TequilaChaser
Cav, you are a handful to deal with in the F4U-1, so you are in they top 20% to 5 % of F4U-1 pilots, that is why you have no troubles with the lower 95% to 80% of flyers in the F6f-5.
A fun fight would be Cav in his hog vs Redd in his F6f-5, or Widewing in a hog vs Greebo, or maybe even me in the -1 hog vs Balsy.
you could change up the mix of pilots/planes any way you wanted to in these matchups I listed and it would come down basically to have the victory go to the guy who did not make a mistake!
This is all very true. Redd was able to get everything out of the F6F that it had to offer. Likewise, I had the F4U-1 at its limits (and sometimes a bit beyond). I do not think that anyone else could have gotten anymore from either aircraft. Which is why I completely agree with Redd's conclusion.
That said, a good pilot in the F4U-1 will beat 90% of the MA Hellcat drivers, probably getting them off the merge. On the other hand, an F6F driver of Redd's skill will beat 99% of the MA F4U-1 pilots. That last 1% reserved for unexpected things, such as warps and collisions on the merge.
Remember, this testing was done to compare dogfighting abilities of the aircraft. No effort was made to unload and extend. It was right on the deck, so diving away was not possible. We flew several sustained turn fights, and the F6F was consistently the better of the two.
This kind of testing is valuable in that the pilots are close enough that the plane is the real deciding factor. If you were to base your opinion on flying against the average MA pilot, one could easily assume that the F4U-1 was significantly better. Against a highly skilled F6F pilot, you define the F4U-1's limitations and advantages with much greater clarity, and the only advantage was on the initial reverse, after that it was the F6F's fight.
Now, against the P-38 or 109G-2, the F4U-1 would have faired even worse, as both of these are insanely good in the pure vertical, exactly the flight regime where the F4U-1 is weakest in performance.
Speaking of the P-38, Ren and I had a scrum with Ren flying the Ki-84 and I was flying a P-38G (50% fuel). Flaps out, these are very evenly matched aircraft. I think that the P-38G scrubs speed much faster when needed, and the Ki-84 is at risk of overshooting. At 130 mph the Ki-84 has a very slight turning advantage, but if speeds increase only slightly, it can't keep the flaps out and then the P-38G can out-turn it. In the pure vertical we were both surprised. At around 100 mph, Ren pulled into a sustained vertical climb. I followed and we both wagged our heads as the P-38G, with no WEP, flew right up the Hayate's butt. We both assumed that the P-38G would fall off first. Not only did it not fall off first, it caught up. And while I was dancing on the rudders, it chugged right on by....
Later, with Ren on my 6 in a SpitV and me not being able to shake him with hard turns, I pulled into the vertical at about 90 mph. The Spit simply could not follow. In fact, starting at 90 mph, the P-38G went over the top with complete control. Joking with Ren, I told him I was looking around the cockpit for the Sikorsky data plate.....
My regards,
Widewing