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I received a PM from Down Under Dave Homewood, asking about the handling of dual control two seat Spitfires compared to single seat ones, especially in aerobatics. First, while I have done a fair amount of aerobatics in my dual MKIX, I have only done a few rolls and stalls, etc. in the others, a single seat MKIX and MKXVI that I have flown. There wasn't time to do that much with them as they were due at other airports. Also, while I have an acro card for Spitfire, 500' limit, I am nowhere near as experienced an aerobatic pilot as some are. I have watched Bud Granley fly my plane, and Elliot Cross fly a Mk IX and could not tell much difference between the single and the dual. Either seem very suited to acro. A Spitfire has a good excess of power and the Merlin marks are fairly light weight; so coupled with the good control response and the excellent characteristics at high g and low speed, both types are fine aerobatic planes. I have not flown a Griffon powered Spitfire, but I think you'd need to use more margin near stall and leave more altitude as a safety margin. Nothing that I have flown, not civilian or warbird, has better stall handling characteristics than a Merlin Spitfire, with the possible exception of a stock 220 hp Stearman. I recently flew a flight simulator for a Mk I Spit. Man it was light and easy, I felt like I suddenly was Patty Wagstaff. I don't know how accurate this simulation was, but it was easy. I did moves I don't normally even practice.
Another point, mine and one other two seater are pretty much as the factory made them, not counting avionics, etc. Others have single stage engines, etc, and their weight and balance re CG may be off. That was the case of one two seater being flown and the experienced pilot asked me about it. It did not seem to handle like mine, and sure enough, they later found it was aft CG. Spit CG has a pretty broad range, it can be flown aft of normal, and during the war they were ferried that way, but they had to be gentle and avoid acro until fuel burned off. A single seat version only has this problem when the aft tank is filled. I am not even sure if any of the current flying ones even still have the aft fuselage tank.
_________________ Bill Greenwood
Spitfire N308WK
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