#111
|
|||
|
|||
First post, whoo. Next step, the post!
Heres a really frequently asked question as I browsed the forum last night, along the lines of: "My engine keeps failing after 15-40 minutes of dogfighting" And a very probable answer that I thought of when I was flying the Dover mission just earlier, so I'll use the spitfire as the example, If you look to the right side of the dashboard theres 3-4 gauges, above the Oil gauge theres a Boost gauge labeled 1-10 with 8-10 labeled red. If you raise your speed between 80% and 100% you go in the red, causing your engine to overheat. So even though you aren't using WEP your engines are still overheating for being so high constantly! I remembered this after thinking about IL-2 1946 where if you stay at 100% long enough you get an overheat warning. Last edited by Duguall; 08-26-2009 at 01:16 AM. Reason: Wow I made a huge run-on sentence. |
#112
|
|||
|
|||
Yea i thought so, but then i started flying around for over 40 minutes on 98% nothing happend.
Only after using WEP for over 5 mins it died. |
#113
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
I'll be sure to keep my engine at idle when not in combat. |
#114
|
|||
|
|||
doesn't seem to work for me (360)
|
#115
|
|||
|
|||
It works. Maybe try the triggers next time.
|
#116
|
|||
|
|||
tried every button
do you mean after you crash when the countdown timer is on screen? |
#117
|
|||
|
|||
I think it was when I crashed afer the primary objective was completed. So you have to beat the mission first I guess.
|
#118
|
|||
|
|||
Only works if you're out of "lives".
|
#119
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
|
#120
|
|||
|
|||
I don't recommend that, but the guy has a good point. All I can tell you is from an actual plane. You only go into the red during takeoff or a go around. Even then, as soon as you're 500' AGL you get it out of the red before you blow a cylinder head. I tested it out in the demo extensively tonight to sort out the good info from the bs and it's accurate. But, you can get around it. Just enter a steep dive and the temp goes down pretty quick. Evidently, they didn't program in shock cooling, which is probably hard to program anyway. That's when engine parts cool unevenly. Big question: why don't we have cowl flap controls to help manage the engine heat?
|
|
|