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IL-2 Sturmovik The famous combat flight simulator. |
View Poll Results: do you know flugwerk company a her real one fockewulf a8? | |||
yes |
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2 | 33.33% |
no |
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4 | 66.67% |
Voters: 6. You may not vote on this poll |
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#11
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When they avoided dogfights was when they flew Spitfires... I've never seen any aircraft type that avoided dogfighting as consistently as the Spitfire... In fact the avoidance of dogfighting by the late Spitfire marks is so consistent and so extreme I had a hard time believing it, thinking as I was that the weakness of guns forced turnfighting even on 1944 pilots: Because only 2% of shots are on target, the target has to be peppered for a sustained time to be brought down, which doesn't help diving and zooming... It turns out the Spitfire's 20 mm are really long-range and powerful, and allows the Spitfire to avoid turnfighting where it is at a disadvantage compared to most types, except the Me-109G or P-51 which are roughly equal or slightly inferior to it... Quote:
Same with the P-51 vs the P-47D, despite the P-47 having much lighter high speed elevator controls and the P-51 being described "as a real two-hander"... So heavier controls are here inversely related to high-speed turn performance... Just because it is counter-intuitive doesn't mean our eyes have to be glued shut to what actually happens... The FW-190A easily out-turns the Me-109G at low speeds sustained turns despite a much higher wingloading... My theory explains perfectly well why those counter-intuitive things are the way they are.... And that includes how reducing the throttle reduces the wingloading... Quote:
At high speed in a FW-190A, it might have better paid to have a light perceptive touch to avoid having the aircraft drop a wing or slip tail forward, if the aircraft's high speed turn/dive pull-out performance had not been so poor... However the constant vibration in the FW-190A's control collumn killed the pilot's hand sensitivity to pressure anyway (like in the controls in the Black Hawk helicopter today), and this happened to a more or lesser extent on many types, and so the fine touch was just not available to a FW-190A pilot hoping to survive on this delicate touch at high speed: Better to fly at low speeds where the aircraft performance was far more capable of compensating the numb hands of the pilot... Quote:
As far as I know nada... And if they had done any, the relationship between engine power and wingloading would be well established: The fact that it isn't shows it was never done in flight on big-engined nose-driven low-wing monoplane types... Quote:
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And how come KG 200 unequivocally states "The P-47D (Razorback needle prop) out-turns our Bf-109G"? And when they don't bother specifying the "turn", is intended to mean sustained low-speed, not short-lived high speed, where the term "radius" is used instead... You just have to close your eyes on a lot to cling to more intuitively easy concepts. More often than not, reality defeats intuitively easy ideas... Gaston |
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