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Controls threads Everything about controls in CoD |
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Thread Tools | Display Modes |
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Ok so I have put a number of hours into the game and I have gotten I think pretty proficient at flying the Hurricanes and Spitfires with variable pitch props (CEM on.) I am able to fly a Mark II Spit level at about 300 mph IAS, which more or less agrees with the real top speed as I understand it.
Now the Ia with its 2 stage prop should actually have a pretty similar top speed in the coarse pitch setting I would think, but I struggle to get it to 250 mph, normally no more than 240! now I know some people have been claiming some of the flight characteristics are a little off but is there really a 60 mph difference between these 2 planes? If not what on Earth am I missing? Edit: Looking up stats it looks like the 2 aircraft should have nearly identical top speeds, though the speeds I have found are at 17000 ft, and I am testing at about 4000 ft. Can the prop make that big a difference between low and high altitude? i.e., would the difference disappear at higher altitude? Last edited by Space Communist; 06-16-2011 at 02:49 AM. |
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#3
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I do not relish flying the 2 stage prop pitch at all.
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#5
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Could it be that MkIa two stage prop in reality use different coarse than ingame, like gear 1 and 2 instead of 1 and 4th gear?
Edit; It's coarse, not course like many in here use http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/coarse Last edited by Buzpilot; 06-15-2011 at 05:29 PM. |
#6
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I was actually kind of thinking along those lines (the pitch of the coarse setting being wrong) since the top speed of the MkII seems to be at around 2700 rpm, and the coarse setting of the Ia drops it down to less than 2200 in level flight. When I get a chance I will drop the rpm of the Mk II down to 2200 at full throttle and see what happens. Last edited by Space Communist; 06-16-2011 at 02:57 AM. |
#7
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The two-stage prop operation is essentially like exchanging one fixed pitch prop for another in mid flight.
What is the most tell-tale characteristic of such props? The fact that RPM is not constant for the exact same pitch value. If you go faster the RPM will go up, if you go slower it will go down and all this while you're not even touching the pitch controls. Why am i mentioning all this? Because even though setting the pitch to coarse might drop your RPM too much, you can still make it reach the 2700 RPM sweet spot by speeding up a bit ![]() Give it a bit of a shallow dive and trim level as you pick up speed and it wants to pull the nose up, you'll see she picks up speed and keeps it in a much better way. Hope it helps ![]() |
#8
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I just did a test in Spit Ia and got IAS of 255mph @ 17300ft @ 2750rpm on coarse pitch setting.
I put that into a TAS calculator and got 342mph. I was running level till the speed stabilized after a shallow dive at about 270mph IAS. But it was holding pretty steady for 20 seconds or so. The course prop setting gives much higher RPM at altitude where the air is thinner. I have come to like de Havilland two speed props. I think they actually historically had a better top speed than the Rotol prop fitted versions. But the Rotol had better climb and acceleration. You just gotta be at high alt to get the most out of em... ![]() http://www.csgnetwork.com/tasinfocalc.html Last edited by justme262; 06-21-2011 at 04:46 AM. Reason: added true air speed calc link |
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