No, after critical altitude the turbo can't produce sea level pressure to the engine any more so the exhaust energy is falling. And It falls away more rapidly than a mechanically supercharged engine, though its critical altitude can be higher.Tommy Cookers wrote:@ both
pilot training films show that P-47 turbo rpm had to be limited by pilot action in response to a graduated flashing light
this at high&rising altitude, compressor load was falling but exhaust pressure:atmospheric pressure differential increasing
Most P-47s were fitted with CH superchargers - H meaning high altitude. Their critical altitude was >30,000ft.
I doubt they used anything like 3lb boost except at WOT - ie at very high altitudes.'Tommy Cookers wrote:the pilot mentioned is now deceased from natural causes, anyway the war was a sensitive topic
he survived flying a Spit 14 with reversed aileron cables (then fittings were made foolproof)
Spit 14s were limited to 3 lb boost takeoff as torque overloaded 1 wheel and tyres burst (so he tried a 0 boost takeoff - 'once !')
Take-off
7. During take-off the aircraft tends to swing to the right and to drag the right wing; full power should therefore not be used immediatelllly on opening the throttle, but only when the aircraft is almost airborne, ie +6 lbs boost is quite sufficient. The nose must not be allowed to fall lower than the horizon as the propeller clearance is very slight.
http://www.spitfireperformance.com/spit14afdu.html
Speed dive limits were a matter of structural limits, due to the loads seen in pullout or due to vibration, or the onset of compressibility at high mach numbers, which would lead to the loss of control of the aircraft. P-47s had a limit in USAAF service as well.Tommy Cookers wrote:Sq Ldr Martindale had in 1943 a prop rpm runaway at around Mach .92, this maybe was the cause of the placarding of RAF P-47s
The Spitfire's normal max mach was ~0.85. The P-47's was ~0.75, the P-51's 0.80 and the P-38's ~0.62.
Martindale was investigating high mach numbers for the RAE. He dived from a very high altitude and achieved speeds >600mph TAS. The failure was not in the constant speed unit, but the engine's reduction gear housing had failed, and had broken away.