Read Clostermann's comment about that & always wondered why that was. This partially explains it.
There was only one Wing of three Spitfire XIV Squadrons and the rest were equipped with Spitfire IXs or Spit XVIs (Spit IXs with Rolls-Royce engines built by Packard in the U.S.A.). the poor Spits had neither the speed nor the range to force the new German fighters to fight.[79]
http://www.thefireman.biz/users/0/my...ation_2210.asp
The first Mk 21s were produced in September 1944, but tests revealed that they were not stable in flight, and they did not enter service until April 1945
The Mk 22 was a development of the Mk 21. It used the cut-down fuselage and teardrop canopy seen on most other late Spitfires, but this reintroduced the instability seen in the Mk 21. The reaction was to install a much larger tail, increasing the area of the control services by over 25%. Production began in March 1945, but the aircraft did not arrive in time to see active service in the Pacific.
http://www.historyofwar.org/articles...fire_mk21.html
There was only one Wing of three Spitfire XIV Squadrons and the rest were equipped with Spitfire IXs or Spit XVIs (Spit IXs with Rolls-Royce engines built by Packard in the U.S.A.). the poor Spits had neither the speed nor the range to force the new German fighters to fight.[79]
http://www.thefireman.biz/users/0/my...ation_2210.asp
The first Mk 21s were produced in September 1944, but tests revealed that they were not stable in flight, and they did not enter service until April 1945
The Mk 22 was a development of the Mk 21. It used the cut-down fuselage and teardrop canopy seen on most other late Spitfires, but this reintroduced the instability seen in the Mk 21. The reaction was to install a much larger tail, increasing the area of the control services by over 25%. Production began in March 1945, but the aircraft did not arrive in time to see active service in the Pacific.
http://www.historyofwar.org/articles...fire_mk21.html
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