Originally posted by lemur:
You're all partially right...
Except the main reason he did it was that his plane was fuel injected. Their's weren't.
What does this mean? Fuel injection doesn't require gravity on order to function since fuel is squirted into the motor via pressure from a fuel pump.
Carberators on the other hand, require gravity to function properly.
Mind you, most late-war planes were fuel injected so this isn't really modeled in WB.
-Lemur
The advantage enjoyed by -109 drivers was mostly in the Battle of Brittain where British Spits and Hurri's used gravity fed float type carburaters. It was pretty early in the war when allied aircraft started sporting the new pressure fed carbs negating the effectiveness of the bunt over manuever used by the Germans.
Pressure fed carberators were the norm for American airplanes. I used to work on R-2800 carberators, which were/are almost the size of some 4 cylinder car engine blocks. Their design has the airflow going up since the carb was mounted on the bottom of the engine. Using a series of bellows to measure airflow through a venturi, the fuel was metered and sprayed into the intake manifold. Same thing for Merlin engines. Those little scoops just below and behind a Mustang's spinner or on the underside of a Spit's nose section are the carb intakes.
German pilots were able to time the negative G bunt over, I suspect, right when it would cause the most disruption to the enemy pilot's aim. They had the benefit of learning from the many experten that used the maneuver and survived the early war years to teach others of the technique. Hartmann described an example in his book, pp 166-168 of "The Blond Knight of Germany" in an action against American Mustangs in late June of '44.
Trivia: Hartmann flew 19 combat missions before scoring his first kill and didn't get his second until his 41st mission, 3 months later! (Nov 5, 1942 and Jan 27, 1943) Had he been an American pilot he'd have been rotated out of action with only 2 kills at 50 missions.
MiG
[This message has been edited by MiG Eater (edited 01-25-2000).]