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FM/DM threads Everything about FM/DM in CoD

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  #1  
Old 10-14-2012, 03:57 AM
Al Schlageter Al Schlageter is offline
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Oh dear, Kurfurst has gone on another one of his rants.

The Merlin in Perspective, no.2 in the R-R Heritage Trust's Historical Series

"Before the end of the Battle Spitfire IIs with Merlin XIIs were in service, with the supercharger gear ratio increased from 8.58 to 9.09:1 giving a better full throttle height at 12lb boost......"
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Old 10-14-2012, 06:16 AM
JtD JtD is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kurfürst View Post
So by all means model the boost cutout and enable pilots to obtain +17 lbs boost and blow their engines at free will...
You make it sound as if it was a useless option or a bad idea, but it is not. If it is combined with a decent overheat / engine damage model, it would imho be the best and most useful way of implementation in game. The engine could take 12lbs of boost, as we know from the take off setting, and disabling the automatic boost control would give the player a chance to manually set and maintain it. What it is not is a simple press a button solution. It is the minimum that was available historically, it's useful and interesting.

Thanks 41Sqn_Banks for the 17lb figure, I wasn't sure if other restrictions were in place before the 12lb modification was carried out. So I went with worst case.
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  #3  
Old 10-14-2012, 08:51 AM
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Robo. Robo. is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kurfürst View Post
Wishful thinking. It doesn't say +12 lbs boost, it says 'emergency boost', which we all know was +9, as per the manual. Selective and wishful use of evidence...
+9 was also climb boost (at 2850 rpm) and there was also all out setting which was +9. All out suggets just full throttle and full rpm, it is not emergency boost and pilots would not refer to it as emergency boost.

With BCC-O, Merlin XII was technically capable of pressures higher than +9lbs., it was certainly safe to operate it at +12lbs. (for that was the take-off power with the throttle gate system and also supported by simple fact that XII was improved III and III was approved for that MAP). +17lbs. is consistent with R-R raw tests but perhaps JtD is right, I don't know. I agree that as for Pilot's Notes the Merlin XII are set correctly for the sim (at +9lbs max), there is not enought direct evidence and the date of amendment is not clear, unofrtunately. The best authority at early Merlins is the Merlin in perspective publication quoted by Al Schlageter in here but it does not clarify the date of emergency boost amendment. There was no modification necessary to achieve that fore sure, it was physically possible to have boosts higher than +9lbs from day one on Merlins XII.

I agree with you that it would be great and interesting to have the BCC-O (ABC) modelled, I would not mind. It is logical and almost certain that it has been used in combat.

For the operation and technical details of both Take Off power and ABC, there were some interesting scans and description by Banks in some other thread.
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Old 10-14-2012, 09:01 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kurfürst View Post
the fact that German pilot reports never seem to mention any boost levels during the whole war, and here's why - unlike the British, they had automated systems since the start of the war, so boost levels were meaningless to their pilots - they did not have to set it separately. Neither they needed to overboost woefully undersized engines to compete and thus it was utterly irrelevant to pilots.
Well to be fair, the automatic boost control was also automated as the name suggests and yet pilots verbally referred to its use in many instances when they decided to override it.

There was actually very specific vocabulary to describe the use of emergency combat boost. The same went for any other conflict where they could use some extra power available (e.g. afterburners in Vietnam war) and often described it in their narrations, written or spoken. I am sure German pilots would be doing the same if that was the case. The only thing that could explain that lack of specific references to Erhoehte Notleistung (and mind you it referred to by the pilots in some late war combat literature as they were flying German aircraft with extra combat power designed by one mean or another) is that in the Emil, for emergency MAP one had to slam the throttle fully forward, there was no switch or knob or any gate to go through to prevent the use of 1,45 ata. So perhaps that is why.
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Old 10-13-2012, 12:24 PM
trademe900 trademe900 is offline
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Originally Posted by Kurfürst View Post
though I heard that the 100 octane RAf planes are finally fixed speed wise, yes?
Not really.

Spitfire is only the same speed as the Hurricane at altitude now (320mph at 18,000 feet), it is still very slow.

At sea level they are all good though.
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