35,000 ft in a VII

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Re: 35,000 ft in a VII

Postby fido » Mon Nov 17, 2003 9:54 am

No way, I struggled just ot get to 41,088, noticed we all have slightly different textures on our aircraft. Wonder if they are all the same under the skin?

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Re: 35,000 ft in a VII

Postby Wing Nut » Mon Nov 17, 2003 10:03 am

I dumped all of the fuel except for about 42  pounds(25% in each wing tank) and changed the pilot weight from 200 to 175 and that helped a small bit.  Flight dynamics that high are really strange.  There were times I would actually be pushing down on the stick and it would cause me to go up.  ???
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Re: 35,000 ft in a VII

Postby fido » Mon Nov 17, 2003 10:24 am

I'd give the fuel changes a try, but I struggled so hard for that last 88ft I don't think it would help. I even tried using flaps, h_ll, I was only going 76 KIAS. Wonder if a full on Photo Recon would do better, maybe a Merlin71 or a Griffon powered Mk XIX?

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Re: 35,000 ft in a VII

Postby Hagar » Mon Nov 17, 2003 11:00 am

WHERE ARE THE CHIPS?????????????????????????

I thought all pommy food has chips?

Another common misconception although chips are popular among the youngsters. I like them occasionally myself but not with every meal. Kids all over the world seem keen on all sorts of junk food I wouldn't even look at. After seeing the common sterotypes & misinformation the media are so fond of I often wonder what impression you guys have of the average Brit. People of my & Fozzer's generation would prefer a good traditional roast dinner. 8) ;)

[quote]No way, I struggled just ot get to 41,088, noticed we all have slightly different textures on our aircraft. Wonder if they are all the same under the skin?
Last edited by Hagar on Mon Nov 17, 2003 11:03 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: 35,000 ft in a VII

Postby HawkerTempest5 » Mon Nov 17, 2003 11:57 am

[quote]I'd give the fuel changes a try, but I struggled so hard for that last 88ft I don't think it would help. I even tried using flaps, h_ll, I was only going 76 KIAS. Wonder if a full on Photo Recon would do better, maybe a Merlin71 or a Griffon powered Mk XIX?
Last edited by HawkerTempest5 on Mon Nov 17, 2003 12:14 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: 35,000 ft in a VII

Postby ozzy72 » Mon Nov 17, 2003 1:14 pm

With the maximum possible fuel load after a speed climb to altitude the VII could whizz along at 40,000ft. This was the maximum accepted practical altitude, obviously as she burnt fuel she would float higher (I checked my Spitfire bible earlier ;D)
Roger is right on the altitude record ;)
Mk VIIs served until 1947 as meterological aircraft. Amazing bit of kit :o ;D But then hey, its a Spitfire ;)
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Re: 35,000 ft in a VII

Postby aeronut » Mon Nov 17, 2003 1:29 pm

For the benefit of Hagar and Foz-Your 'Meals on Wheels'will be starting next week ;D

(Without the Chips,Pomme frites or Fries ;))
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Re: 35,000 ft in a VII

Postby C » Mon Nov 17, 2003 5:20 pm

I believe the highest interception of WW2 was made by a Mk VII by Prince Emanuel Galitzine (who passed away late last year or earlier this year) against a JU-86.

I can't fine the exact figure online, but I believe it was in the region of 37,000-39,000ft

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Re: 35,000 ft in a VII

Postby Wing Nut » Mon Nov 17, 2003 5:29 pm

I'll tell you what.  Fozzer, why don't you fix us all dinner, freeze it, then send it out overnight UPS.  Then we can all heat it and have a nice Simviation dinner all at the same time! ;D
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Re: 35,000 ft in a VII

Postby fido » Mon Nov 17, 2003 5:55 pm

hey  Hawker   I swear the MkXIX thing was just a lucky guess. Hope the de-froster worked and the pilot had a good heater. ::)

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Re: 35,000 ft in a VII

Postby Guruswarmyoz » Mon Nov 17, 2003 10:44 pm

According to the book figures that i have (from the book: Aircraft of WW2, by S Wilson):

Mk VII
Max Level Spd (MPH TAS) 408mph @ 25,000 ft
Service Ceiling: 43,000Ft.
The HF Mk VII is a presurised high Alt fighter powered by either a Merlin 64 or a Merlin 70 of 1710HP & 1655HP respectively. The aircraft uses the "B" type wing with extended wing tips.

Mk VI
The Mk VI was the 1st Spitfire to use cabin/cockpit pressurisation to counter the High Alt Ju-86P Recon aicraft used by the Luftwaffe at the time.
Max Spd (MPH TAS) 364 MPH @ 22,000ft
Service ceiling: 39,200Ft
Powerplant: Merlin 47 of 1415HP.
The aircraft uses the "B" type wing with extended wing tips.

Note here: Service ceiling was defined as when the climb rate falls to 100fpm --> this is also used for the service ceiling definition for modern light aircraft. For modern military (i.e. Jet fighters) the service ceiling is defined as i understand it as when the climb rate is 1,000 fpm.
Also note, these figures are for a standard Atmosphere of 15 degrees Celcius and a pressure of 101325 pascals (1013.3 millibars//hectopascals) at sea level and nil wind.
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Re: 35,000 ft in a VII

Postby HawkerTempest5 » Tue Nov 18, 2003 11:31 am

[quote] hey
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Re: 35,000 ft in a VII

Postby Hagar » Tue Nov 18, 2003 11:45 am

[quote] hey
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Re: 35,000 ft in a VII

Postby fido » Tue Nov 18, 2003 11:52 am

Hawker
Better you than he, I think if he had both lost cabin preassure, and run out of fuel at 51-5 he would have had more to say than, OOPS. ;D ;D
Last edited by fido on Tue Nov 18, 2003 11:54 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: 35,000 ft in a VII

Postby Wing Nut » Tue Nov 18, 2003 12:02 pm

Has any propellor driven craft ever officially broken the speed of sound?  I know there are rumours of it being done in a Thunderbolt in a steep dive, but nothing I've seen that's official...
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