I was talking to a gentleman the other day who flew the Typhoon during the battle for Europe.
Apparently the Typhoon could take a huge amount of punishment and still stay in the air, he flew below tree top level and would target individual tanks using a direct radio link with the ground troops.
Apparently there were numerous engine modifications during this time which the pilots were told very little about. If they were captured they couldn't reveal sensitive information to the enemy.
The Typhoon was in his words "Awful" up high. It had a very nasty spin characteristic at 15-20 thousand feet and would happily go into a flat spin. During the spin the centrifugal forces would pin you into the cockpit and the stick would hammer around smashing into various parts of your anatomy. On one occasion he lost control whilst practicing aerobatics at 20,000 ft and regained control at about 3000 feet. He told me that more pilots were lost during their first week of conversion training than at any other point in their careers.
His analysis was that the Typhoon was the best ground assault aircraft of the war, literally a flying tank. When the three blade prop was replaced by the four blade prop she became a very stable platform that could outrun most interceptors at the altitude they were flying at and could survive some pretty intense flak.
Will