Saville began a topic about Spitfires being difficult to takeoff and land, as he had seen a TV program to that effect. Now I wrote the idea that a Spit was so tough to fly that only a superior race of beings could handle one, but somehow that idea did not sell. So here's the truth..
Spitfires are EASY to takeoff, at least that is my experience and most of those that I have witnessed. I came to Spit flying in 1983 as a 400 hour private pilot. I had about 30 hours of tailwheel time, mostly in a Piper Cub, a bit of dual in Stearman, not solo, and a checkout in a T-6 from John Hess, with one solo flight. I owned a Mooney M20 Ranger. On a scale of 1-10, I was about an 8 as a PRIVATE pilot, certainly not any expert. I had a few things going for me, mostly the interest and desire to be good, the patience to learn, I was able to afford lessons, and I had excellent 20-10 vision. And I had a healthy respect for the dangers of bad decisions in flying and even more so warbird flying. Spitfires were more rare then, so when I bought mine, I was able to meet some of the top CAF and warbird guys like Howard Pardue and learn the ropes. My Spit dual was from Earl Ketchen, ex Nam E-6 combat pilot and Reno P-51 racer with the Tired Iron team. I got about 20 hours of dual with Earl in my plane, starting in the rear seat before solo. I was then on my own and went to Osh and had 27 hours in type when I flew the 1st time there. So it can't be that hard. I was competent in the plane, but I wasn't experienced in all the aspects of flying it cross country, and flight planning esp re weather, and we were still learning the plane, like fuel consumption. I tried to be smart and safe, I knew I was not Bob Hoover.
I have read and been asked about torque on takeoff. It is not that big a deal, FOR A TRAINED PILOT. If you sit feet on the floor and static, it can be. Remember that a Spitfire has rudder trim, just like a T-6, Mustang, etc. If you set full right rudder trim as the book suggests, only moderate rudder pressure is needed on takeoff. I use only half trim for takeoffs now, it still is not hard. If you are not used to keeping the nose aligned with the runway in your Cub, Champ, or Citabria, or if you use more than 8lbs boost it can be a problem.
What does the book, the official Pilot Notes for Mk IX say? "There is a tendency to swing to the left, but this can easily be checked with rudder". And dat's da truth. The rudder is very effective on a Spit, especially the larger one like on my late model Mk IX T. I have not flown an early one with the smallest rudder, sure would like to!
Now some people talk about how blind a Spit or P-51 or such is on takeoff. So what? When you roll out on the runway you line the nose up so it is pointed straight down the middle. Then as you advance the throttle you just keep it there, using whatever rudder is needed.
even though you can't see directly over the nose, you can see and feel if the nose starts to move either way. One thing I have noticed in flying with Howard or other top pilots, is they are aware of what is going on with a plane and they make corrections right now. I have taxied or flown dual in other planes with a passenger or novice pilot, and asked them, "what is the nose doing, which way is it moving or pointing" and they can usually tell me right away, the difference is that they don't do anything or enough to correct. And if you feel that you need to see over the nose in order to takeoff, how are you going to land it? And yes I have heard of wheel landings. The nose on a Mk IX Spit is long, it is almost like sighting down a rifle barrel, easy to know where it is pointing. I have just rarely found this hard. Note that I have flown Spit IXs and XVIs, I have not fown a Griffon one, but I have taxied it and don't see a radical difference other than needing left rudder.
Now as you smoothly bring the power up to normal takeoff of plus 7 lbs boost, it will begin to require some right rudder, depending on trim. I hold the stick back, tail down until the airflow pulls it, then ease it to neutral. The pitch is sensitive, it is a matter of easing the stick forward not pushing the nose down. Acceleration is brisk, is needs less runway and less speed than a 51. At 70 knots, slight back pressure and you are off probalby in about 1500 feet. Check the throttle friction, change hands on the stick and raise the gear. Once clean, take out some right trim. set climb rpm at 2650 and go upstairs where Merlins rule. Pretty soon you see this just feels right, powerful, balanced, nimble but not touchy. For me, virtually every time I feel lucky that as an ordinary person I get to fly a fighter, a part of history, and I don't have to risk getting shot at. As for boost in lbs, O llbs is normal atmosphere pressure, lets say 30 inches. At takeoff of 7 lbs, double the 7 to 14 and add the 30 you started with to total 44 inches manifold in U S terms. Minus counts, so in the pattern at -4 equals 22 inches, that is the base 30 in minus 8 inches. I'd sure like to be doing it today.
_________________ Bill Greenwood
Spitfire N308WK
Last edited by Bill Greenwood on Fri Nov 14, 2008 1:11 pm, edited 10 times in total.
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