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dduff442
02-07-2010, 05:08 PM
...is on megaupload (http://www.megaupload.com/?d=7I41WDLR)

It comes in the form of a 4.07 il-2 Compare installer with a set of data folders for the 4.09 planes. Just drag the contents of the zip included with the installer into the il-2 Compare install directory and you're done.

I've no idea who did the data (I found it via a link on a Romanian forum) but thanks whoever you are.

dduff

335th_GRSwaty
02-07-2010, 05:43 PM
Thank you!!

FAE_Cazador
02-07-2010, 10:07 PM
That link is broken. "File has been Deactivated", says Megaupload.

dduff442
02-07-2010, 11:10 PM
That link is broken. "File has been Deactivated", says Megaupload.

Mmmm... Worked for me just now. Allow the 'please wait' counter to tick away 45 secs until the 'Regular Download' button appears, then click that.

rakinroll
02-07-2010, 11:13 PM
Thanks mate.

FAE_Cazador
02-08-2010, 07:16 AM
Now it works again, Thanks, mate

Kudlius
08-20-2010, 01:13 PM
What is TAS in these charts?

AndyJWest
08-20-2010, 01:43 PM
What is TAS in these charts?
TAS = True Airspeed. The indicated airspeed (IAS) shown on instruments and the speedbar gets progressively lower than the true airspeed as you gain altitude.

Erkki
08-20-2010, 01:45 PM
TAS = true airspeed. The speed shown by speedbar and gauges is IAS, Indicated Airspeed, where effects of temperature and pressure are not fixed.

In game IAS = TAS at sea level, in Crimean map, the higher you fly the more TAS is compared to IAS... Was it 4% more per every climbed 1000ft/0.3km?

In real life gauges can be calibrated to an altitude and pressure that is not sea level normal pressure at normal temperature (0C), though. Sometimes multiple differently calibrated gauges for both altitude and speed are used, together with GPS and even inertial systems.

AndyJWest
08-20-2010, 05:07 PM
You can use this table. It came with earlier versions of IL-2:
http://i958.photobucket.com/albums/ae65/ajv00987k/IasTasChart.jpg

Buzpilot
08-20-2010, 05:41 PM
ops sorry, I changed my mind while you wrote your post AndyJWest and I deleted last post, I'll repost here;

http://www.flightsimaviation.com/rule-of-thumb/21_Calculate_your_True_Airspeed_TAS.html

In this link it say 2% in #3, but after I checked #5 that seem more accurate, it shows a significant difference.
I tested with a Mustang Mark III 100% power, at 27500 feet in IL2 it show 620km/h TAS (344 knots), and 380km/h IAS (211 knots)
#5 27,5*3 (82,5 )+ 211 + 7 = 300.5 knots TAS ,difference is 43.5Knots.
It got me thinking, wouldn't this make it more fun to fly at higher altitudes, if this is more correct, it would sure improve flight, because this would give a much higher IAS, and that would reduce speedstall problems at higher altitudes.

AndyJWest
08-20-2010, 06:55 PM
I hadn't realised you'd deleted your last post, Buzpilot. I've edited mine to avoid confusion.

The percentage figure is only an approximation - the relationship isn't totally linear, and in any case only holds under standard atmospheric conditions. None of the stock maps reproduce this, though I believe that Smolensk is the closest.

There is more to high altitude performance than just the IAS/TAS relationship in any case, and I don't think there is a systematic error in IL-2 due to any miscalculation.

Buzpilot
08-21-2010, 01:47 PM
, and I don't think there is a systematic error in IL-2 due to any miscalculation.

I'm not sure, if the formula in example #5 is correct( It say; Normally accurate to within 5 Knots.), it indikate just that.
And many planes in real life ww2 had their best combat altitudes above 20 000 feet, but nobody makes missions at those altitudes in IL2, not just because it takes a while to get there, imho .

Edit; I don't think this is a error, but maybe too simplified, and after comparing lots of planes in il2compare, I was amazed of the amount of data in flightmodels, and it probably would get even better with more advanced IAS calculation.