Quote:
Originally Posted by Crumpp
You are using a weight and balance sheet that incorporates the longitudinal stability fix and is from February 1944 to prove the NACA conclusion was not correct.
Yes, the RAE addressed the issue of the longitudinal instability in the Spitfire around 1942. However, the Spitfires used in the Battle of Britain did not benefit from the fix.
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The only thing that changed was the revised CoG limits for the aircraft with Rotol propeller and bob weighs if the CoG went beyond the normal limits, as often happened in the case of the Spitfire V.
As Quill noted, slight unstability was built in for purpose and prefered by pilots. However, stability margins were narrow and improper loading could easily cause problems.