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ArtKramr wrote:
Subject: More long-range Spitfires and daylight Bomber Command raids, with From: Guy Alcala he also says that Mitchell wanted to stick with the tailskid, but the Air Ministry insisted on the tailwheel, because they knew (but couldn't tell Mitchell at the time, because it was classified) that they were going to lay down all-weather (i.e. paved) runways at all the fighter bases, and the tail skid wouldn't last long under those conditions. This thing's just filled with great info. Guy It seems as though the Air Ministry didn't entirely trust Mitchell. Imagine being an aircraft designer and having th air ministry withhold info that would impact on your designs. The mind boggles. It wasn't a case of trust, just a case of need to know. Mitchell only needed to know that a tailwheel was a firm requirement, not the rationale behind it, to design one. I imagine the spec change to increase the armament from 4 to 6 or 8 x ..303s was handled the same way -- they told him what they wanted and asked him if it could be done, but probably not the reasoning behind it. Whether the tailwheel case was an example of the government being classification happy is another matter; the Brits tended to be (and still are, to a great extent) a lot more reluctant about releasing such details, even when they're apparently innocuous, than we were/are. OTOH, there were some probably unnecessary security concerns over Mitchell's technical assistant, S/Ldr H.J. 'Agony' Payn, AFC RAF (ret) because he'd divorced and his second wife was foreign (maybe German; I forget). After Mitchell died he was named manager of the Design Department at Supermarine (not Chief Designer, the post which Mitchell had held). The Air Ministry forced Supermarine to remove him from work on the Spitfire or anything else classified because of this, and in fact the company fired him. Supermarine tried two different designs, a single wheel and one with dual wheels (side by side). The latter tended to get clogged with mud, so they went with the single. Guy |
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#2
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In article , Guy Alcala
writes ArtKramr wrote: It seems as though the Air Ministry didn't entirely trust Mitchell. Imagine being an aircraft designer and having th air ministry withhold info that would impact on your designs. The mind boggles. It wasn't a case of trust, just a case of need to know. Mitchell only needed to know that a tailwheel was a firm requirement, not the rationale behind it, to design one. I imagine the spec change to increase the armament from 4 to 6 or 8 x .303s was handled the same way -- they told him what they wanted and asked him if it could be done, but probably not the reasoning behind it. Whether the tailwheel case was an example of the government being classification happy is another matter; the Brits tended to be (and still are, to a great extent) a lot more reluctant about releasing such details, even when they're apparently innocuous, than we were/are. OTOH, there were some probably unnecessary security concerns over Mitchell's technical assistant, S/Ldr H.J. 'Agony' Payn, AFC RAF (ret) because he'd divorced and his second wife was foreign (maybe German; I forget). After Mitchell died he was named manager of the Design Department at Supermarine (not Chief Designer, the post which Mitchell had held). The Air Ministry forced Supermarine to remove him from work on the Spitfire or anything else classified because of this, and in fact the company fired him. Supermarine tried two different designs, a single wheel and one with dual wheels (side by side). The latter tended to get clogged with mud, so they went with the single. Guy The 'need to know' principle is at least a couple of hundred years old in UK government. The notion (valid, if infuriating at times) is that even the most innocent details can be amassed and used, for instance to gain knowledge of civil service culture to the point that someone can masquerade as a government official and dupe another official into giving away secret stuff. One of the acknowledged masters of building up a mass of cultural information to get more out of people was Hanns Scharff, who got tons of operational information out of captured allied aircrew just by having friendly chats with them. His approach worked where 'roughing up' had failed. A double wheel, like the Mosquito, was it also an anti-shimmy measure? Cheers, Dave -- Dave Eadsforth |
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Dave Eadsforth wrote:
In article , Guy Alcala writes snip Supermarine tried two different designs, a single wheel and one with dual wheels (side by side). The latter tended to get clogged with mud, so they went with the single. Guy snip A double wheel, like the Mosquito, was it also an anti-shimmy measure? None of the sources I have give the reasoning behind it, just that the a/c was tried with single and dual tailwheels. Assuming the drawings are to the same scale, the dual tires were smaller diameter than the single, around 2/3 to 3/4 of the larger one. Ernie Mansbridge, who was Supermarine's tech. rep during the prototype service trials by the RAF, reported the following on 6 March 1937: "The split tail wheel has been fitted for today's flights. The pilots noted the lack of bouncing tendency, but on the second flight the wheels were completely locked by mud and could not be revolved until the mud had been dug out from between the wheels." Price writes "This type of tail wheel was not fitted again, and from then on the single-wheel Dunlop type was used." Guy |
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In article , Guy Alcala
writes Dave Eadsforth wrote: A double wheel, like the Mosquito, was it also an anti-shimmy measure? None of the sources I have give the reasoning behind it, just that the a/c was tried with single and dual tailwheels. Assuming the drawings are to the same scale, the dual tires were smaller diameter than the single, around 2/3 to 3/4 of the larger one. Ernie Mansbridge, who was Supermarine's tech. rep during the prototype service trials by the RAF, reported the following on 6 March 1937: "The split tail wheel has been fitted for today's flights. The pilots noted the lack of bouncing tendency, but on the second flight the wheels were completely locked by mud and could not be revolved until the mud had been dug out from between the wheels." Price writes "This type of tail wheel was not fitted again, and from then on the single-wheel Dunlop type was used." Guy Thanks for the detail on that. Despite the fact that the tail wheel was intended for use on runways, I guess they thought that Spits may have to operate from earth strips occasionally, so abandoning the double wheel would have made sense. I was amused by what was once said about the Mosquito and its split 'anti shimmy' wheel. Apparently, the first time any pilot flew a Mosquito he would be warned about the tail shimmy, and so his first landing was so carefully executed that there was no shimmy at all. Next flight he would relax, and bingo - all over the place. Got them almost every time... Cheers, Dave -- Dave Eadsforth |
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#5
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Dave Eadsforth wrote:
I was amused by what was once said about the Mosquito and its split 'anti shimmy' wheel. Apparently, the first time any pilot flew a Mosquito he would be warned about the tail shimmy, and so his first landing was so carefully executed that there was no shimmy at all. Next flight he would relax, and bingo - all over the place. Got them almost every time... Cheers, Dave Apropos of not a bunch but the Fairchild C-119 was a bitch in this regard...the MLG struts were so long that when the bearing points and connections got the least bit worn then the damned thing would shimmy like to tear the bloody gear off. Someone actually did heavily damage the nose gear once, but it was usually the mains. -- -Gord. |
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