In the forums on fighters, guys asked my impressions of flying Spitfire and comparing it to P-51. 24 years ago as a 300 hour Mooney pilot, Dan Martin gave me my 1st 51 ride, probably so I'd quit hanging around! I bought the gas, $175, which might pay for a T-34 hop now! It was loud, fast, with great visibilty in the bubble canopy. Auto traffic below seemed like targets, and Dan was smooth. Then I saw an ad & bought a dual control MkIX. I got Cub, Stearman, & T-6 checkout & and 20 Spit hours before solo. Spit has very good manners, but is an eye opener, it climbs 6 times faster than a Mooney; gear down speed is faster than 172 top speed. It is a 5th heavier than a 6, has 3 1/2 times the power. My instructor, a combat jet pilot,Reno 51 racer, said at 50 inches" it really gets with the program". Some planes have a good engine, some a good wing; this had both. Nothing I've been in sounds like a Merlin and the wing is great, fast or slow. Howard Pardue, flying the CAF IX, said "it's not real fast, but that's the finest wing ever put on an airplane. RAF and warbird pilot Charlie Brown, "I have not flown a plane with more docile stall than a Spit" Not fighters, but any plane. Note, 220 stearman is only equeal I've seen. Spit is very good around the pattern and for acro.
I live at 8000', where many planes barely climb; the Spit will peg the vertical scale at 4000 fpm, & at less than full power;service ceiling is 7 miles high. Power & noise are instant, no throttle lag. Roll it into a steep bank and it is predictable; turn rate is whatever G you want to pull. Limits are 9 positive, 8 negative. I flew a RCAF jet instructor, said "this thing will turn up it's own tailpipe'.The noise level is better than a 51, and with wing radiators cockpit is much cooler; but no heat in winter. Economy cruise is about 240 mph at 47 gph. Mine has 108gal internal, so about 2:15 to empty, without my 60 gal belly tank. It can trim hands off, but is no airliner. It is lands well 3 pt. prefered, wheel landings ok for jet pilots or those worrried about visibilty in the flare. Short final at 80 knots, stall at 62, and tends to roll true with out needing brakes. Go around docile, 44" plenty even with gear and flaps. For any pilot, to fly apiece of history is great and it is still a classic. More later on the 51 & other Spits.
_________________ Bill Greenwood
Spitfire N308WK
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