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Isn't the instability the fact that the Spitfire tightens its turn by itself without further control input???
The pilot has to stabilize the plane by countersteering. Like a rear wheel driven car in a power slide around a turn, working, but stable is different. |
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Still the "pro Spitfire faction" is trying to push the dispute to a black and white scenario and concentrate to steer the thread to sections where they believe to have valid counter-documentation.
The truth is always grey! Undisputed should still be the sensitivity and lightness of the longitudal control of the Spitfire. Also proven is the fact that the longitudal control isn't stable, as it increases the g-load without further pilot input. Those things should be implemented in game. If now a player pulls his joystick all the way back in a cruise speed turn, the plane should react accordingly as the resulting g-forces would be way above the structural limits. The player should be forced to use a small input to initialisize the turn and the to almost neutralize the controls to hold that turn, as the pilots had to to in RL. In a tightening turn there should be signals (i.e. vibrations) to indicate the beginning of the pre stall buffet, followed by shaking and the loss of energy and increasing turn radius when the turn is further tightened and the buffet is fully entered. Further tighteneing the turn should lead to a flick-roll. The disharmony between ailerons and elevators should also be there. Imo that is a summary that should please any rational view on this thread. |
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Really? It was the second major problem he mentions out of the 68 structural failures. Quote:
So a small input becomes an ever increasing acceleration until arrested by a push force. It is a symptom of the instability. This is a measured by the NACA and a function of the divergent oscillation stick free measured by the RAE. At high speed, the aircraft acceleration can overcome the airframe's limits to destruction. |
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Just need to bear in mind that the effects being called for are 'not' conducive to qualities noted for being 'easy to fly', so how do we meet half way on this? how are we going to recreate an alleged instability in an aircraft but retain the ease of flying qualities? or are we really saying that one NACA report on a MkV Spitfire outweighs the accounts of every Spitfire pilot of any Marque that ever lived?
When are we getting the 109 thread? |
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I was going to do the Hurricane next. |
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First, the anti-Spitfire faction exist's only in your mind. Second, anybody who knows stability and control can read the article to see the characteristics clearly. The gentleman who was interviewed for the article points out the fact they did not have a good understanding of stability and control engineering at the time. The article is most interesting because it shows the thought process of the day and not for its engineering conclusions. You however, take those engineering conclusions as proof. By that thinking, we should be doing meta-center calculations to prove the airplane was stable!! :grin: |
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