![]() |
Anyone notice break up speed/g-force related differences with 4.10?
I dunno, but to me, it seems that when I'm flying in my two favorite planes these days, the Tempest and 190 (any), I have to be WAY more cautious about turns at high speed and just diving in general.
One of the oddest things I've had happen is that I was flying along in a Tempy straight and level at 500kph (not in a dive in other words) and my wing just suddenly broke off (I had been looking at the map for a second but was still flying straight when I closed the map). Anyone else noticing the FM being less forgiving about break speed and that sort of thing? Also I sometimes hear "cracks" in the plane but can't see any visible damage (nothing's broken off the plane) and this'll often happen at speeds of only 400-550 kph and not in ridiculously tight turns either... Anyone else noticing this kind of thing or am I just crazy? |
It's very likely that you pulled (actually pushed :D) too much negative G. Remember, negative G-Limit is much lower than positive one. If your elevator trim is off, and you try to keep your nose level, you must counter the lift by pushing the stick forward. Do it too harsh and something bad will happend.
Negative G is a huge AI's exploit. They just push the stick forward and dive away, there's no way you can follow without breaking your own wing. Hope that G-limit will be someday applied for AI too. Curiously enough, I once tried to find out how much G you must endure during carrier catapult take off (I know it's a mod but it's also quite a good one anyway). Despite the fact that you're accelerated from 0 to 200 kph in matter of seconds, the G-meter (wonderwoman view) always shows 1. |
This was all online, and when I'm bnzing someone I always set myself up to pull positive Gs.
Regardless, how does that explain the level flight wing break off? Weird stuff man. |
From the 4.10 user guide:
Quote:
As for a wing breaking in level flight, that is odd - perhaps you had overstressed it previously, and a minor twitch was the final straw. Regarding catapult launches, the G meter only measures forces in the aircraft vertical axis, and this should remain at 1G. (this incidentally, seems to be why a taildragger sitting on the ground registers less than 1G -the force isn't perpendicular to the aircraft datum. There is probably a rounding error too) |
All times are GMT. The time now is 07:34 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 2007 Fulqrum Publishing. All rights reserved.