Ralph Rotten said:
The prop wash is centered on the fuselage (single-engine) so even though a steep angle of attack will cause turbulent air to flow over the wings, it is mostly caught up in the fuselage airflow. At most it would only compromise a small portion of the wing's lift.
That could be, but my main interest, for now, is in the extent of the asymmetry of the prop's thrust during turns.
A serious load asymmetry, even 10%, by itself, could have major implications.
Also, ideally, this prop asymmetry would have to be evenly divided between a loss on the outer turn prop half (accelerated prop spiral airflow), and a load gain through air deceleration on the inside prop half.
The reason I would want both is that, first of all, it makes the total prop imbalance greater by combining more modest (and thus more plausible) values, and second, it would justify the combined use of much reduced power,
with the strange use of full coarse prop pitch at very low speeds, to increase the sustained turn rate. (See account below, of which I know of several very similar)
Lower power would reduce the inside turn disc half overload, while a coarser prop pitch would compensate the lost outer turn disc load, matching better with the acceleration of the prop's outer airflow shifting above the wing.
It is multiple accounts like those below, plus many other disparate clues, like the observation of large turn ability gains with shorter noses, but especially
extra power being detrimental to sustained low-speed turn rates, that motivate my line of inquiry:
Hanseman (505 sq.) combat report, 24 May 1944 (Merlin P-51):
"Dogfight at 500 ft. (with a second higher aircraft,
after climbing
from 130 ft., having closed to 50 ft. on a landing wheel down 109G)"--"At first he began turning inside me. Then he stopped cutting me off
as I cut throttle, dropped 20 degrees of flaps and
increased prop pitch.
Every time I got close to the edge of the airdrome they opened fire with light AA guns."--"
Gradually I worked the Me-109G away from the field
and commenced to turn inside of him as I reduced throttle settings."When the enemy decreased power,
I used to throttle back even more.
250kmh seemed to be the optimal speed to turn (sustained speed turns with 1944 Me-109G, 160 mph, an aircraft which had a 405 mph top level speed...)"
- Kyösti Karhila
Donald Caldwell wrote of the FW 190 D-9’s operational debut in his "The JG 26 War Diary Volume Two 1943-1945" (pages 388 – 399): "The pilot’s opinions of the “long-nosed Dora”, or Dora-9, as it was variously nicknamed, were mixed. The new airplane lacked the
high turn rate and incredible rate of roll of its
close-coupled radial-engined predecessor."
1946 US evaluation of FW-190D-9: "1-The FW-190D-9, although well armored and equipped to carry heavy armament,
appears to be much less desirable from a handling standpoint than other models of the FW-190 using the BMW 14 cylinder radial engine."
The last two quotes concern a lightened long nose (from heavier short nose) conversion of the same airframe type.
WoA