#21
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I think when your life depends on it, you find the exact numbers you want to hit on all legs of the circuit. I've had a fair amount of stick time, but even the best of friends won't let me take the landing all the way down to the runway (danged FAA lol). Usually you don't have AAA holes in your wing though. I SO hope weather effects are detailed in SoW. Splitter EDIT: Found the Pilatus video...check out around 20 seconds in. What an amazing aircraft. Last edited by Splitter; 09-12-2010 at 02:54 AM. |
#22
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I've flown a 172, a 150, a PA-38 and a Tiger Moth (but only not very straight and not very level). These planes are very light and have very low wing loading, so cutting lift is a good thing on landing (although you're stuck with the Tiger!). Heavier 'planes with high wing loading aren't going to take off again unless you make them, so cutting lift ain't so urgent. A sudden gust could lift a Tomahawk but it'd struggle with a 109, or any other WW2 fighter. Depending on the wind strength of course. Mind you, this is 'only a sim/game'...........unfortunately. As soon as my lottery win comes through, I'm buying a Yak3. |
#23
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In Il-2 we've got alot of runway (and I don't think I've ever burst a tyre lasnding) so it doesn't matter too much. It would be good to get some short strips in the sim (SHort grass strips in SOW hopefully???) to make us concentrate on our landing technique. bye and thanks! |
#24
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I kept the flaps down because I had ample runway, and I didn't feel bothered to raise them at that time. If it was a short field landing, I would have raised them and started braking sooner. I should mention that I had full back pressure on the stick once I touched down. Relaxing after touchdown may cause your tail to rise even without the use of brakes. Landing with a nose-wheel is similar in a sense, but for a different reason. You keep back pressure to prevent the nose gear from coming down too hard, or from sticking in the mud. |
#25
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Things like that may tick off a lot of old timers, but it will certainly bring out the real virtual pilots (is "real virtual pilots" an oxymoron?). There is a lot more to flying a plane than most of us realize. Just learning to cross control or crab in a crosswind is going to drive some people nuts at first. Landing a 109 in a cross wind might lead me to drastic measures.....but I'll go there with a smile. Splitter |
#26
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My sentiments exactly. I can't wait to have some "real" pilot workload!
I get a greater high from making a good landing than making a kill in this game. But I can see that I'm not the only crazy one |
#27
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Bf-109 landing gear was very fragile.It was said that was common to belly land them.
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#28
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It is... and it isn't, so it is..or is it? I think you've inadvertantly created some wierd oxymoronic loop..
Last edited by winny; 09-12-2010 at 09:23 PM. Reason: spulling.. |
#29
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__________________
my best: Bf-109; He 162; Hellcat; Schwalbe Core2Quad 9400 2.66Ghz 45nm - 4x2gb ddr2 800 Kingston = 8GBRAM - XFX Radeon HD 5850 Black Edition 1Gb DDR5 765Mhz/1440steam/ 4.5Gbps- 1/2 Terabyte Wn D 32mb - Mother Assus P5QLE - P&C Silencer 750W - Sentey RJA246 LCD 4 coolers - DVD/RW 20x LG - LCD Samsung P2350n 23" - Edifier C2 2.1+1 waiting for: Il-2: Armée de l’Air; Continuation War; Battle for Moscow; Stalingrad; El Alamein; Sicily; The West Air Campaign; Berlin ZakKandrachoff
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#30
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Yes, BF-110, I would like to know what prompted the Germans to design the plane with that landing gear. In that they are rooted in/near the fuselage but fold outward into the wing, I don't see it as a space saving measure. It would seem that because landing gear mounted on the wings folds into toward the fuselage it is six of one, half dozen of the other. Or were the wings too weak? Seems like I should know the answer but I don't lol. Splitter |
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