Mike , as for final approach speeds, that is one category that I value as making a plane a good, friendly, and useful, safer, all around plane,even with high perforance. Obviously when you go for some all out extreme, like Rare Bear or Strega, you may have short wings or no flaps,and so can't fly verywell at slower speeds. BUt some more general purpose planes seem to do more things well. The suggested final approach speed of the Mk IX single seat Spitfire in Canada is 80 MPH which is plenty, This is full flaps, the only kind in Spits, and throttled fully back by the threshold. When going into its home field which is pretty short and has an obstacle to dodge on short final, I made sure to be 80 mph on short final and decelerating by the flare; defintiely not maintaining a touching down on the wheels at 80 mph. This worked out fine, light braking slowed me to turn off about 2/3 of the way down. This is not a landing area that you'd want to be sloppy coming into and be 10 mph fast and float half way down.I was concentrating very much from downwind on around. Flying the Harvard into the same airport, I used 70 KNOTS on short final and it was not a problem, it slows down easily once on the ground. I make or try to make 3 point landings in both types. When I refer to these speeds, I mean on short final, that is about the last time I glance at the airspped indicator, just before the flare. I don't mean way out when turning base to final. I don't know the final approach speed of the 109, but just in watching it seems no faster, mayhbe even slower, than a Spitfire. For my two seat Spitfire, slightly heavier than a single seater, I use 80 KNOTS as the short final speed,and it seems good. That is 1.3 x VSO of 62 knots. I have never flown in a Pitts, but just in watchinig them land, it seems they often are flown in pretty fast. That may have to do with the model Pitts or maybe the abilty and preference of the pilot.
_________________ Bill Greenwood
Spitfire N308WK
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