Quote, Ack-Ack: "You cannot be more wrong than that, a vertical turn is exactly what it is, a turn in the vertical plane and was never used by WW2 pilots as a reference to a horizontal turn."
- I'm tired of debating this: Read the context of the text, and go educate yourself on WWII pilot lingo:
http://img30.imageshack.us/img30/4716/jjohnsononfw190.jpg If you are unwilling to educate yourself on WWII pilot language, or open your eyes to what is written, then there is not much point in debating with willfull ignorance, is there? Hightech, if you are a pilot and have spoken to WWII pilots, why not set this guy straight?
-Quote PJ_Godzilla: "If we resolve the slight reaction torque plus slight force imbalance caused by the turning effect to a single force vector at the point of thrust, yes, we can say there would be a slight nose-down moment caused by turning the nose puller and LIKEWISE slight nose down moment caused by the pusher, assuming the point of thrust is above the "pivot". The only way you get "nose up" out of that pusher is if you change the realtionship of the "pivot" and the point of thrust."
-If there is a nose-down moment in either case, both propulsion and traction thrust centers starting above the pivot point by the same amount, then the
alignment of the center of thrust is getting
closer to the pivot point in the propulsion case and is getting FURTHER away in the traction case... I don't see how there is a way around that...
Perhaps there is no nose-up moment in propulsion, I agree, but it sure is getting closer to that when pushed and further away when tracted... That alone is very significant from the point of view of leverage... I don't see why you you would not mention it...
Besides, to get back to the Anton vs Gustav issue, anyone who has faced both in battle, and knows anything about the issue, knows perfectly well that the FW-190A acted like a "Saber", which is curved, and that the Me-109G acted like a "Floret", which is straight, which basically means the FW-190A out-sustain turns the Me-109G... Observed Luftwaffe tactics are perfectly in sync with this, as linked previously...:
http://luthier.stormloader.com/SFTacticsIII.htm This means that whatever the theoretical math says, it is ignoring some basic issue, and is therefore not an authoritative source... Just like downthrottling cannot be used to reach the calculated 2.44 ratio "Corner Speed" if the real "Corner Speed" is found at 320-350+ MPH !
Fortunately I have encountered since, on other non-simmer sites, other very knowledgeable people who have come to the exact same conclusions as I have regarding the FW-190A's low-speed sustained turning excellence and high-speed turning mediocrity, and how it out-sustains turns the Me-109G at lower speeds by a significant margin... So the complete upside-down comprehension of this issue appears more confined to the computer simulation world than I previously feared... Perhaps because of a greater dependance on maths to create computer flight models...
To which I can only say: Thank God!
Gaston