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Amazing Details Here!
I have crash landed a Spit just after take-off and retracting the gear, and when the plane came to a halt I could see the (fairly detailed) wheel in his well through a large hole in my wing. And ... the wheel was still spinning ... a bug? Nope! Inertia! The wheel in fact slowed down progressively, until it stopped. I swear that I expected that it started to oscillate around the equilibrium ...
WHY THE HELL did they took the pain to model such a small detail, when maybe I'm one of the few to ever see it? At any rate, it was a great moment of simulation ... Chapeau to Oleg and C.! |
you answered your own question..
Why have so much detail? Because it's a simulation. |
That.........Is Cool!!!
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that is really really coool. they went so far to do such a painstaking job of simulating realistic behaviors. 1C team you have my admiration.
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I was taught to tap the brakes just before raising the gear. You can mess up the wheel well if the tire is spinning when it gets up in there.
binky9 |
Maybe not quite as cool as yours, but...
I was flying a Hurricane, and was bounced by some 109s. I got shot up. I was yankin' and bankin' for all I was worth when I heard a strange rumbling noise and the plane's handling seemed to change somehow. I looked around, and saw my left wingtip and aileron were on fire! That's not the cool part. This is the cool part. The fire started as just a small burning patch at the trailing edge of the left wingtip. I could "feel" the Hurri fighting the increased drag, wanting to yaw to the left. In a few seconds, the fire smoothly spread to cover about the last 25% of the wing, including most of the aileron. As the fire spread, I could "feel" the aerodynamics growing steadily worse. Most impressive to me, the loss of roll authority was gradual as more material burned off that aileron. No more "aileron controls damaged" and the stick goes dead. The damage models in '46 were and still are so very much better than just about any other game... and what I experienced in that burning Hurricane was way ahead of anything in '46. |
The metal wingtip was on fire? There's almost nothing to burn in a Hurricane wingtip. I think the DM needs a tweak.
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As far as a fire goes, it's (just) my opinion but I don't think a fabric wingtip or aileron at flying speed would catch fire without a good fire already going in the wing, assuming it used butyrate. (I'm a mechanic/pilot who's worked extensively with fabric aircraft so I'm ... an expert - lol) And as far as aluminum goes, it would likely be an unusual situation (in this context) where an aluminum alloy catches fire. |
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But thanks for sharing this, it feels my heart with pain knowing that soon many of us will be flying full real thus hve no possibility to enjoy these great graphics :( Crashed during take off ona ME110 yesterday, plane flipped over, I was amazed looking at the wheel, tyre blown off, still turning, irregularly as the axle had been twisted... ~S~ |
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