evading the crux of the matter for 5 years ? .... no
but yes, I often don't respond to gainsaying (of things that I didn't say eg that the Vulture was good) ...
after 5 years we still have only Sabre 'smoke and mirrors' ....
a single figure (3500 hp takeoff 20 lb boost) in a 1947 amateur-interest book ... with ZERO corroboration or context
this has NOTHING to do with the Tempest
the late 1945 Flight article has S VII on ADI Tempest 3000 hp t/o 17.25 lb boost and 3055hp @MSFTH 2250' 17.25lb
Closterman's unit 'had a few' - he collected his in Mar 1945
it seems Sabre ADI existed before this - do we even know if Closterman used this 3055 or some earlier/lesser version ?
do records exist to support this in wider use ? - the (often knowledgeable) simulator fans seem quiet about it
there's unit records of ammunition load and use but nothing on emergency boost ?
comparing almost all of the Sabres made with many of the conventional engines (then) made .....
the sleeve-valve engines power:weight ratio was c.10% worse than those conventional engines
this is the crux of the matter (of the Sabre Tempest wrt conventional fighters) ....
a fighter being a machine whose weight is almost proportionate to the engine's weight .....
the Tempest wouldn't be better than a conventionally-powered plane designed for the same altitude & wing loading
3055 hp from 2540 lb is 0.38 of your kg/hp (conveniently ignoring the ADI weight both dumped and burned)
no better power:weight ratio than an Allison or a single-speed Merlin without ADI (or late DB605 with ADI)
the (2 stage non-turbo) Allisons in the Korean war F-82s gave (on 115/145 100" & ADI) 2250 hp for 1595 lb
this is 0.32 kg/hp ..... (ie better even than the notional (or mythical) 3500 hp Sabre)
ADI makes a mockery of the 'Sabre is efficient' arguments
45% of the burn (in high supercharge) is methanol - the ADI massflow is c. 3 times the fuel massflow replaced by ADI
the technical anti-Sabre argument was largely that its weight was disproportionately high (due to its lavish porting)
the technical pro-Sabre argument was largely that supercharger power was disproportionately lower (due to lavish porting)
ie at some height and power the Sabre could need only single stage supercharging vs a conventional engine's 2 stage
but the 'Sabre crybabies' still cry over officialdom's denial of Sabre '2 stage Sabre rights'
since 2 speed 2 stage Merlins were c.200 lb heavier than 2 speed single-stage ones ....
we should expect a 2 stage Sabre to have been 350 lb heavier than the 2540 lb Sabre VII ie 2900 lb .... so ....
the RR Eagle 22 weight of 3900 lb was proportionate to its size and 2 stage design
(ok 2 stage 2 speed Griffons had superchargers series-connected ie fixed relative ratio so lighter - but 3 speeders ?)
the Griffon 65 article tells us some surprising things .....
EVO is 64 deg BBDC - later even than the Sabre's
'lean' mixture isn't truly lean but c. stoichiometric (though 100/130 etc stoi is c.14 not the expected 14.7 for gasoline)
rather high minimum power .... this simplicity a sign of the times ....
the maximum power taken by the supercharging is 600 hp ..... but ....
doesn't c. 300 hp of that return to the crankshaft by the 'air motor' effect of the piston engine ?