Hi Shorty,
>Ram has the effect of raising critical altitude. Is there less ram effect when climbing then in straight lin speed? Now that I think about it, it think there would be.
Yes, ram pressure increases to the square of the speed, so the difference between climb and level flight is marked.
>But why, then, is the neutral-to-low blower shift point on the VMax graph the same as it is on the climb graph. With ram, which the Corsair used in neutral, it would have been able to maintain power higher than without, or with less, ram, so it seems the shift point should be higher.
Hm, very good observation! That would indeed indicate the absence of ram pressure. Maybe we should search for a diagram of the F4U's intake system? (Zeno's site linked by Justin has a diagram of the F6F's system, and if I'd seen that earlier, I had not been as confused :-)
With regard to the gear change question: Did you notice that the Grumman graph you posted above features neutral gear on combat power? In the side by side comparison, it demonstrates that the BuAer data did not rely on neutral gear for combat power. The Grumman data looks a lot like the F4U-1D data, too, so I think it should finally solve the question.
The Grumman data also has the same "extra-step" weirdness between MIL and Combat Power! =8-O
With regard to neutral blower and ram pressure, here some data from my F6F-5 calculation:
Top speed at sea level, 60" Hg, neutral blower, no ram effect: 550 km/h
Top speed at sea level, 60" Hg, neutral blower, ram effect: 564 km/h
So I get 7 to 8 knots speed loss due to the lack of ram effect - far less than the 20 knots quoted by Corky Meyer. (Since I estimated ram effect based on the speed graph which might not perfectly match the power graph, there is a certain uncertainty about my number, but 20 knots seem a bit much.)
I believe my calculation currently over-estimates low-level speeds because it under-estimates high-altitude thrust. (Currently, it's based on shaft power rather than on indicated power because I took the quick and dirty route.)
To round off this post, I finally had a look at the different data sets we have for the F6F, and it seems that the BuAer set is the slowest of them all.
I have found:
- BuAer
- AHT graph (posted by Shorty)
- F4U-4 documentation (posted by F4UDOA)
- Fw 190 comparison report
- TAIC Zero report (posted by F4UDOA)
Do we have any more data? I'll try to prepare a graph showing all the figures combined.
Regards,
Henning (HoHun)