RE: Flying torches
Posted: Fri Apr 18, 2008 7:45 pm
Gee, I've told you before about the island's correct name and it is on the UV map so what's the problem?
Gee, I've told you before about the island's correct name and it is on the UV map so what's the problem?
mdiehl, what is your basis for stating a Wildcat is more manuverable than a Zero? Objectively speaking of course.
Do you have a graph of the Wildcat and Zero flight envelopes? Corner velocities, etc, etc or any other factual, statistical information on Zero and Wildcat flight characteristics? If you do produce them.
Because the overwelming general concensus among Allied aviators who flew the Wildcat against Zeros testify, Zeros are more manuverable. Do not dogfight with them, do not try to turn with them, do not try to out climb them, etc., etc. As well the testing of the nearly intact Zero captured in Alaska by the US said Zeros are more manuverable than our fighters.
"This is cherry picking specific points in a flight envelope and not any actual measure of manuverabilty."
If your question is what was the pilot survivability % between Zero and Wildcat pilots, I don´t know. Certainly for the Zero pilots it was quite low. They went home if ill or wounded. The Allied flyers rotated their pilots out of the combat area after so many missions yes? But they had the luxury of a much larger pilot pool.
Again, in numerous accounts there are qualifiers that you have overlooked. At high speed the Zeke was a pig. The control surfaces became increasingly difficult to move starting around 270 mph. Between the F4Fs more rugged construction and the greater output of its engine it simply could roll faster.

The UV Forum's very own pit bull. He chomps down on something and never stops, never gives up, no matter what.
Hans-Surely you can't be serious. The answer should be obvious to some one who claims to be so higly educated as you.
Hans-You claimed in your private message to me to be able to read and write in three languages in an obvious attempt to impress me with your level of intelligence.
ORIGINAL: tocaff
66 years ago in the skies of the SW & Central Pacific the Zeros and Wildcats went at it and there was no clear winner overall except for the fact that the Japanese forces were stopped cold in their advance. Both planes were good at what they did and you (meaning the pilots involved) were a fool to play to the other guy's strengths. So anyone who claims that either of these 2 types of planes were clearly superior to the other is wrong. Just like in sports, nothing is won or lost on paper, rather on the field of engagement.
It's been pointed out many times in this thread that statistics prove the WIldcat fought the Zero to a standstill.
So anyone who claims that either of these 2 types of planes were clearly superior to the other is wrong.

Argentine Mirages operating at their extreme ranges. Come on Ike the Brits weren't stupid enough to make things easier. Those Mirages were only carrying 1 Exocet missile instead of 2 because Argentina didn't have many of them. The Harrier had a superior electronic suite than the Argentinian Mirages and in the modern world electronics are at least the equal in importance as any other attribute as long as the fight is in the missile envelope and not at gun range.

The Zero handling became increasingly difficult at 270mph...So?
And besides this, dogfights are not fought at 270+mph between Zeros and Wildcats.
Can a Wildcat fight a Zero at near top speed constant?
What happens when your Wildcat does this turn at your magical 270 mph if what you say is true? It immediately will start to lose its energy. The speed and altitude will come down and I suspect with its little stubby square wings, heavy body and slow overall top speed come down very fast.
Again, cherry picking magical points on a flight envelope graph do not equate into one fighter being more maneuverable
The Zero was undeniably a more manuverable aircraft.
To all those whom it mattered most in 1942 knew this.
About the best Wildcat pilots could do was what they did, dive down on Zeros from an altitude advanatage and then run.
Hoping they had enough altitude and dive speed advantage to get away because remember, in level flight Zeros were faster. That, or shoot Zeros off of each others tails. Basically the Thatch Weave.
Later, with the Hellcat, when they had the speed and power advantage, yes, they could mix it up and follow Zeros up in loops and everything.