greatgonzo wrote:
Oh, I should have been more precise. Spitfire did eject the 20mm shells snce the universal wing has been introduced. The B wing, however did have the boxes collecting them, right at the edge of the wheel well.
51fixer, You surely are right about Spit and her heavy nose problems. The other reason for wooden props would be the easiness of breaking by the contact with the ground, thus preventing the frame from rolling over her nose. I also agree with the problems of balancing the nose placed armour contrary to wing based. The later one is always in balance unless something doesn't work as the system operates in symmetry. Still the center of gravity is a point and the farther You go from it - the farther You are, no matter of the direction isn't it? Weight disposition in the wings does affect the manoeuvre abilty of the plane, or else?
I just wanted to show the example of wing mounted armamment ejecting shells int the boxes

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Aircraft have a basic center of gravity range, whether loaded or empty. The CG is a point at any moment but this point moves and so there is a range of movement allowed. Stay inside of the allowable range and it'll fly good or at least be controllable. Get the CG outside of the allowable limits and the A/C is less controllable and maybe even uncontrollable.
It starts with the empty weight CG. With minimum fuel, no external stores and expended ammo you could be on one extreme of the range. (Note that a T-6 with low fuel, a single pilot and no baggage can just exceed the fwd CG limit. Most have a little ballast (weight) bolted in the tail to counteract this situation.)
Fully loaded with fuel, bomb/drop tanks, ammo, rockets and the kitchen sink you could be on the other extreme. (A P-51 or Spit with rear fus fuel tank requires using fuel from the rear tank in a sequence. The A/C can be safely flown with a CG that is aft but only for climb and cruise. Use of that rear fuel moves the CG fwd into a range that allows the combat maneuvering when it is needed. Do those same maneuvers with the rear CG and you may fall out of the sky.)
Items on the A/C affect the CG because of weight and distance, this becomes a moment. A light weight item in the tail can have a large moment that is the same as a heavy item a foot away from the CG.
For military use there were charts and forms to calculate the CG and the Weight and Balance.
For civil ops of the P-51 and the T-6 the FAA has the CG range as part of the Type Certificate Data Sheet. This is specs for what the A/C has to meet to be legal to fly if it is registered in the US and flying in the Standard or Limited Category. At least with the P-51 both the gross weight and CG range are different than the Military specs.