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Posted

Are there issues to be resolved with engine performance? Ā With a clean aircraft I have not been able to even approach the numbers on the engine settings chart. Ā Things seem underpowered. If you believe your performance is correct, please publish a guide to achieve the stated performance.

Ā 

Thank you!

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Posted

Ā 

This guy's a pilot and has an informed opinion.

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Posted

The Corsair actually had quite light stick forces. And that's a BIG rudder with a lot of authority.

(That said, it's way too twitchy.)

The roll rate is definitely off. The F4U had a rate of roll equivalent to the Fw-190, so about 150 degrees per second. He's giving it a rate of roll of 60 degrees per second, less than half of where it ought to be.

Posted

Ā 

1 hour ago, Mistermann said:

This guy's a pilot and has an informed opinion.

He has only flown very low horsepower light aircraft. Not sure why he’s wearing a flight suit, perhaps he was in the Civil Air Patrol. With regard to tactical aircraft of any kind, I’d take his judgement for entertainment purposes only.

We’re in the ā€œif it’s hard, or feels different from expectations, then it must be brokenā€ phase. Give it time, and don’t forget to have fun!

Posted
4 hours ago, Saxman said:

The roll rate is definitely off. The F4U had a rate of roll equivalent to the Fw-190, so about 150 degrees per second. He's giving it a rate of roll of 60 degrees per second, less than half of where it ought to be.

IIRC the test you're referring to was with a F4U-4 with improved ailerons.

F4U-1 should be around 90°/s, give or take.

  • Like 1

So ein Feuerball, JUNGE!

Posted
3 hours ago, Bremspropeller said:

IIRC the test you're referring to was with a F4U-4 with improved ailerons.

F4U-1 should be around 90°/s, give or take.

Nope, it was an F4U-1. It was from a 3-way test in 1943 with the Fw-190, F4U-1, and F6F-3.

The boosted ailerons were first added late in the Birdcage run.

Posted (edited)
On 6/23/2025 at 2:14 PM, Saxman said:

Nope, it was an F4U-1. It was from a 3-way test in 1943 with the Fw-190, F4U-1, and F6F-3.

The boosted ailerons were first added late in the Birdcage run.

The data in America's Hundred Throusand shows a top roll-rate of around 90°/s (at 290 mph, graph shows a limited speed range, though) and claims anecdotal rates of up to 120°/s at about 350mph. Extrapolating the available graph shows that's a believable claim, but no actual data is given.

That means the 190 would roll quicker below about 320mph and the Corsair above 320mph (give or take a couple of mph). At 255mph (the 190's calculated peak roll rate at 50lbs stick force), the Fw is about 100% better than the Corsair's roll-rate (160°/s vs 80°/s). 

Edited by Bremspropeller

So ein Feuerball, JUNGE!

Posted

Fw 190 A-4/A-5:

At 150 mph: ~140 degrees/second

At 250 mph: ~150–160 degrees/second (peak performance)

At 350 mph: ~100–110 degrees/second (roll rate drops due to control stiffening at high speeds)

Ā 

F4U-1D Corsair:

At 150 mph: ~130 degrees/second

At 250 mph: ~140–145 degrees/second

At 350 mph: ~120–130 degrees/second (maintains better high-speed roll due to aerodynamic design)

Posted
On 6/27/2025 at 3:08 PM, Mike Busutil said:

F4U-1D Corsair:

At 150 mph: ~130 degrees/second

At 250 mph: ~140–145 degrees/second

At 350 mph: ~120–130 degrees/second (maintains better high-speed roll due to aerodynamic design)

Where's that data from?

So ein Feuerball, JUNGE!

Posted

The primary reference for the F4U-1D roll rate data comes from U.S. Navy comparative tests conducted during World War II, which typically involved the F4U-1D (not the F4U-4) against captured or evaluated Axis aircraft like the Fw 190 A-series. These tests, such as those documented on wwiiaircraftperformance.org, explicitly mention the F4U-1D in comparisons with the Fw 190 A-4 or A-5. For example, a 1944 Navy test report (ptr-1107) compares the F4U-1D’s maneuverability, including roll rate, against the Fw 190 A-4, noting the Fw 190’s slight roll rate advantage at medium speeds (around 150–250 mph).

The U.S. Navy tests (e.g., 1944 trials) explicitly involved the F4U-1D, as it was the primary Corsair variant in service during the period when Fw 190 A-series aircraft were captured and evaluated. The roll rate values (120–145 deg/s) are consistent with the F4U-1D’s design, which was slightly less agile in roll than the Fw 190 A-4/A-5 but competitive, especially at higher speeds.

These tests, conducted during World War II, compared the F4U-1D against the Fw 190 A-4 or A-5, as seen in documents like the ptr-1107 report. The F4U-4, a later model with upgrades, wasn't part of these early tests, and forum discussions on WW2Aircraft.net Forums: FW-190A5 vs F4U-1D and F6F-3 explicitly mention the F4U-1D.

Posted
28 minutes ago, Mike Busutil said:

The primary reference for the F4U-1D roll rate data comes from U.S. Navy comparative tests conducted during World War II, which typically involved the F4U-1D (not the F4U-4) against captured or evaluated Axis aircraft like the Fw 190 A-series. These tests, such as those documented on wwiiaircraftperformance.org, explicitly mention the F4U-1D in comparisons with the Fw 190 A-4 or A-5. For example, a 1944 Navy test report (ptr-1107) compares the F4U-1D’s maneuverability, including roll rate, against the Fw 190 A-4, noting the Fw 190’s slight roll rate advantage at medium speeds (around 150–250 mph).

The U.S. Navy tests (e.g., 1944 trials) explicitly involved the F4U-1D, as it was the primary Corsair variant in service during the period when Fw 190 A-series aircraft were captured and evaluated. The roll rate values (120–145 deg/s) are consistent with the F4U-1D’s design, which was slightly less agile in roll than the Fw 190 A-4/A-5 but competitive, especially at higher speeds.

These tests, conducted during World War II, compared the F4U-1D against the Fw 190 A-4 or A-5, as seen in documents like the ptr-1107 report. The F4U-4, a later model with upgrades, wasn't part of these early tests, and forum discussions on WW2Aircraft.net Forums: FW-190A5 vs F4U-1D and F6F-3 explicitly mention the F4U-1D.

The point they're arguing is those tests are only comparative, but don't provide actual measured numbers.

Posted
10 hours ago, Mike Busutil said:

The primary reference for the F4U-1D roll rate data comes from U.S. Navy comparative tests conducted during World War II, which typically involved the F4U-1D (not the F4U-4) against captured or evaluated Axis aircraft like the Fw 190 A-series. These tests, such as those documented on wwiiaircraftperformance.org, explicitly mention the F4U-1D in comparisons with the Fw 190 A-4 or A-5. For example, a 1944 Navy test report (ptr-1107) compares the F4U-1D’s maneuverability, including roll rate, against the Fw 190 A-4, noting the Fw 190’s slight roll rate advantage at medium speeds (around 150–250 mph).

The U.S. Navy tests (e.g., 1944 trials) explicitly involved the F4U-1D, as it was the primary Corsair variant in service during the period when Fw 190 A-series aircraft were captured and evaluated. The roll rate values (120–145 deg/s) are consistent with the F4U-1D’s design, which was slightly less agile in roll than the Fw 190 A-4/A-5 but competitive, especially at higher speeds.

These tests, conducted during World War II, compared the F4U-1D against the Fw 190 A-4 or A-5, as seen in documents like the ptr-1107 report. The F4U-4, a later model with upgrades, wasn't part of these early tests, and forum discussions on WW2Aircraft.net Forums: FW-190A5 vs F4U-1D and F6F-3 explicitly mention the F4U-1D.

wwiiairfcraftperformance unfortunately is down and only the first test (ptr-1107:Ā F4U-1 vs F6F-3 vs Fw 190) is attainable otherwise via web archives.

Do you possibly have a link to the latter ('44 trials)?

Ā 

Guyton in "Whistling Death" quotes "more than 180°/s" which I find to be grossly exaggerated, given the data at hand. As mentioned before, 120-145°/s is reasonable at high speeds, given the data out of America's Hundred Throusand. But not at ~250mph, where the 190 peaks. For that, you'd need substantial modifications on the ailerons and possiblythe wing, instead of just adding boost-tabs. Boost tabs alone will help slightly in initial roll response (*) and mostly in achievable roll rate at high speed. They won't change achievable roll-rate at speeds below max attainable stick-force.

___

(*) time for the stick to bang onto the stop is quicker, the lighter the required forces are

So ein Feuerball, JUNGE!

Posted
6 hours ago, Bremspropeller said:

wwiiairfcraftperformance unfortunately is down and only the first test (ptr-1107:Ā F4U-1 vs F6F-3 vs Fw 190) is attainable otherwise via web archives.

Do you possibly have a link to the latter ('44 trials)?

Ā 

Guyton in "Whistling Death" quotes "more than 180°/s" which I find to be grossly exaggerated, given the data at hand. As mentioned before, 120-145°/s is reasonable at high speeds, given the data out of America's Hundred Throusand. But not at ~250mph, where the 190 peaks. For that, you'd need substantial modifications on the ailerons and possiblythe wing, instead of just adding boost-tabs. Boost tabs alone will help slightly in initial roll response (*) and mostly in achievable roll rate at high speed. They won't change achievable roll-rate at speeds below max attainable stick-force.

___

(*) time for the stick to bang onto the stop is quicker, the lighter the required forces are

It helps to use the way back machine.

nullI can't remember where I found the F4U roll rate data, but it should be onĀ wwiiairfcraftperformance. The blue and dark-blue lines are the corsairs left and right roll rate up to 42lbs of stick force. The lighter line is purely a visual gestimate.Ā 

image.jpeg

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