Here is a data fact sheet on the B17 from the Air Force in 1949
http://www.wwiiaircraftperformance.org/ ... istics.pdfOn page 4 it shows a power off stall speed of 89mph at a combat weight. It doesn’t give a flap setting which would change the speed. It is the only factual baseline reference I have been able to find so far. It is a baseline starting point but not a definitive answer. Stall speed is dynamic and some factors that affect it are gross weight, configuration, power and wing loading.
With an engine(s) out, aircraft performance is certainly degraded. First you have asymmetric power, which then requires asymmetric flight control input which both of which result in drag. The flight control input cancels out the asymmetric thrust but has only decreased the overall total drag created with an asymmetric power condition and no control correction being applied. A term in aviation for flying with an engine out, is raise the dead. In level flight it means have approximately a 5° bank angle to counteract the asymmetric thrust. For example with a dead engine on the right side of an aircraft you would want to raise the right wing. Doing this however further increases the drag on the right side has the right aileron is down and the left aileron is up. To counteract this and the asymmetric power, the rudder is deflected to the left which results in a zero sideslip condition that helps minimize the drag the fuselage would have created had the aircraft controls not been used to counteract the asymmetric thrust. While this technique has minimized the drag created when flying with an engine(s) out, overall drag has still increased and performance is degraded.
The stall speed on the wing with two good engines is lower than the stall speed on the wing with the engine(s) out as the airflow is better over the wing with the good engine(s). Another factor affecting performance is whether the engines are feathered or unfeathered with more drag if a dead engine remains unfeathered. The further away on engine is from the centerline of the aircraft, the more asymmetric drag is produced, resulting in more control input required to counteract it and performance degraded.
Any turns made would result in a loss of lift and an increase in descent rate. It is a trade off that needs to be in the decision making process. To minimize loss of lift shallow wide turns are recommended. Turning into the dead engine only requires a releasing the asymmetric control input that is being applied. Aerodynamically the aircraft will naturally want to turn that way. The trouble becomes when you want to stop the turn, full control deflection will be needed and it will not respond quickly. The result being aircraft performance degrading the steeper the turn.
As lift is loss in a turn, the nose will need to be lowered to maintain best speed increasing the rate of descent. If the up elevator is applied to arrest the descent in a turn, speed will decay, wing loading will increase which in turn increases the stall speed. The potential for rolling the airplane over on its back increases as there is not enough control authority to keep the airplane upright with asymmetric power condition. This is known as a VMC roll over.
The most important variable to control is airspeed which is done by minimizing the drag created by control and power inputs.
There is another way to counteract asymmetric thrust by reducing power on the good engine. Obviously, that will degrade thrust and performance and the only way to maintain airspeed is to lower the nose an descend.
Each aircraft is different, some aircraft would take so long to turn away from the dead engine, the resulting time and space required to make that turn would prolong the time it takes to complete the turn. If the aircraft is descending while flying at best speed, it might not be able to make the airport. Potentially the fastest way to turn is use the natural direction the aircraft wants to go. Either way has consequences and a pilot just has to make a judgement call as to which way is best for any given situation.
I will refrain from making any judgement or comment as to what happened up in the cockpit since I wasn’t there. I am just trying to provide background factual aerodynamic information that affects aircraft performance with an engine(s) inoperative as I understand it. You are free to disregard my post and/or draw your own conclusions.