I don't think its
absolute rollrate performance that is troubling the 190 drivers. Does it really matter if the 190 is 8% too slow in roll at such and such speed? Probably not.
It's the
relative roll performance which appears to be the problem. I've heard it suggested that the 190 rollrate has been turned down to avoid warp-rolling issues - it just rolls too durn fast in real life for our imperfect internet to keep up with.
So just to show the postion, here is extracted data from the same rollrate chart, expressed in a different way.
I took the NACA and AH data for planeset comparison, basically 190 -v- the world. Worked out the rollrate differences based on NACA data, the rollrate differences based on AH data and subtracted one from the other to find the difference in performance.
So, for example, look at the Spitfire at 225 IAS. The difference is roughly -23 degrees. That means that at that speed the Fw190 rolls 23 degrees/sec too slowly AS COMPARED TO THE SPITFIRE.
Not absolute roll performance.. relative roll performance.
Now, I don't know whether the original NACA report is accurate: for all I know the NACA team might have been sitting on a shady veranda, sipping Margueritas when they should have been out testing aircraft. So the value of the comparison is going to be affected by the reliability of the NACA source material.
As you can see, I haven't bothered to compare all the AH planes. Frankly, it bores me to even attempt it. I'd have to re-test the P51B, perhaps the P47D-11 etc and I just dont have the time to do so.
I've already posted the link to the excel spreadsheet containing all the test results. If anyone else wants to do the tests, be my guest.
But I'll say one thing before I go: If this roll performance issue had been one which disadvantaged the P51, the Spitfire, the P47 or (God forbid) the F4U, it would have been fixed months ago.
[This message has been edited by Jekyll (edited 06-05-2001).]