In the good while since I posted here, a lot of discussions took place on Il-2's GD about the sustained turn rate of the FW-190A relative to other types, and, despite an overwhelming majority of simmer detractors, more evidence has piled up against the US Navy evaluation of the F-190A, which in my opinion was a very mediocre attempt at confirming the prejudice that higher weight always loses...
The key factor here is, I theorize, nose lenght: Take a barbell handle with disc weights on ONE side only, pointing the discs down: A short handle will make it easier to "point" the weight at the ground at a SLANTED angle OFF from the vertical: Lenghten the handle and you will feel the pressure inside your hand rise higher, despite the disc weight being the same.
The disc weight is an exact replica of the prop thrust: Slanting the angle off the vertical is the equivalent of what an aircraft is doing while turning: Twisting the disc sideways to where it really wants to go without your action...
A short handle or short nose has less leverage to press your flesh inside your hand/press down on the wing's center of lift, REDUCING the leverage down on the wing's center of lift.
In effect, my argument is that a Spitfire a FULL power turning at 250 MPH will have a higher REAL-TURN wingloading than a FW-190A at partial power: Lighter wingloading wins, just as everybody says... Note in Johnny Johnson's account the Spitfire pilot says he is at FULL throttle, which explains his defeat in sustained turning...:
http://img30.imageshack.us/img30/4716/jjohnsononfw190.jpg My argument is that a shorter nose acts like a reduced throttle but without actually reducing the throttle. They both have the same effect of defeating our calculated expectations that do not take into account the basic issue of leverage physics...
Imagine now pointing off-vertical the one-side weighted barbell, but this time with the disc weight JUST ABOVE your hand: Can you picture how easy it is now to point the now-empty handle extremity directly at the ground, at slanted angles? That is exactly the advantage a jet has because the propulsion is behind the center of lift. That is why the jet does not benefit from downthrottling, unlike the patently obvious example here:
http://www.spitfireperformance.com/mustang/combat-reports/339-hanseman-24may44.jpg This is how inane is the argument that prop traction and jet propulsion behave the SAME, which is current simulation dogma...
Quote, Thorsim: "now remember what i originally posted, that the handling of the 190 most closely represents a very flawed USN report and contradicted the majority of other sources. this issue would not be solvable unless and until HTC releases their data sources which they will not do. however i have invited anyone to produce a German report that confirms the handling qualities of the 190s in the game/s. after looking for years, i have yet to find one."
The US Navy report is likely flawed because it was run at full power ONLY by non-combat experienced pilots: The FW-190 behaved very poorly in turns above 250 MPH as is evidenced by THIS test which WAS made by front-line combat pilots...:
http://img105.imageshack.us/img105/3950/pag20pl.jpg That the Navy proved incabaple of really discerning the FW-190A's inferior handling at high speed (note here in the US Army test the "tendency to black-out the pilot", which is in effect a decelerating stall, initially "inside" the turn after a sudden pitch up), is merely an illustration of their prejudice about how a high weight aircraft should regain an advantage at high speed: That the aircraft itself has fairly poor handling at high speed was not enough to dissuade them from their baseless prejudice of branding it an "interceptor"... (An "interceptor" with a poor climb rate and a truly pathetic dive pull-out performance: Riiight...)
There is, unfortunately, ONE German document that confort current prevailing opinion: The Rechlin La-5 evaluation which DOES say the Me-109G out-turns the FW-190A: I think this was again the test pilot prejudice of always testing turns at FULL throttle: Slightly above 250 MPH at full throttle, I would expect a FW-190A-8 running at 2100 hp to turn WORSE than a Me-109G at 1500 or even 1800 hp... Think of those barbells weights again...
Note I would never claim the low-speed difference between those two is huge: The Me-109G-6 may have a smaller sustained turn radius at its peak sustained turn rate speed of 160 MPH according to Fin ace Karhila... As the US P-47D test makes obvious, the Me-109G is certainly superior-turning to the FW-190A ABOVE 250 MPH...
Which is exactly ACTUAL German tactics observed by the Russians looked like this: FW-190 flew low to engage in prolonged turn-fighting, Me-109s flew high to do "boom and zoom" attacks...:
http://luthier.stormloader.com/SFTacticsIII.htm Quote:
"They interact in the following manner:
FW-190 will attempt to close with our fighters hoping to get behind them and attack suddenly. If that maneuver is unsuccessful they will even attack head-on relying on their superb firepower. This will also break up our battle formations to allow Me-109Gs to attack our fighters as well. Me-109G will usually perform boom-n-zoom attacks using superior airspeed after their dive.
FW-190 will commit to the fight even if our battle formation is not broken, preferring left turning fights. There has been cases of such turning fights lasting quite a long time, with multiple planes from both sides involved in each engagement."
-So more evidence is clearly piling up against prevailing simmer opinion... After all, isn't it clearly what Rall meant by the Me-109 being a straight "floret" and the FW-190A a curved "sabre", and that they complemented one another?
While we are at it, some new interesting Soviet turn times (though since likely at full power not really representative, but at least indicative):
FW-190A-4: 19-23 sec. (FW-190A-5 being quoted by the Soviets as 1 second faster, so as low as 18 sec.). Me-109F: 20 sec. Me-109G-2: 22 sec.
I don't know what the wide range of the FW-190A means, perhaps depending on pilot? Clearly the lowest turn time is better than anything a Me-109 can do...
I'll remind everyone an actual FW-190A-8 Western ace actually posted his real-life experience on this very board a few years ago, and his description was exactly that of the Russian experience: A fearsome low-speed turn-fighter that performed at its best downthrottled for horizontal maneuvers...
And yes, at full throttle in the turn, the Spitfire will have a higher real-life wingloading than a downthrottled FW-190A...
Try different barbell handles and weights and see why...
Gaston