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| FM/DM threads Everything about FM/DM in CoD |
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#1
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Where in this thread have i ever talked about a 190 and its stall behaviour??? Even Spitfire pilots used this accelerated stall flick roll as a last resort escape maneuvre, i've read somewhere. It is i. e. bad, when one is pursuing in a spit and it happens, changing the hunter to the prey in the worst case. Btw, the 190 tactic was especially successful in a low level flight
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Win 7/64 Ult.; Phenom II X6 1100T; ASUS Crosshair IV; 16 GB DDR3/1600 Corsair; ASUS EAH6950/2GB; Logitech G940 & the usual suspects ![]() Last edited by robtek; 07-25-2012 at 04:06 PM. Reason: additional info |
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#2
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No.. are you?
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I simply noted how hypocritical some of the blue minded members in this forum can take one airplane trait, in this case the acc stall 'flick' and refer to it as a negative trait when talking about non-blue planes and refer to it as a positive when talking about blue planes.. That is to say I was not specifically talking to you, as much as I was talking about some of the the blue minded members of this forum. In short, if the shoe fits, ware it, if not than don't. Quote:
So you agree that both the Spit and Fw190 had this trait.. And you also admitted how it can be a good trait when used to escape.. Yet in your previous post, when talking about the Spitfire you made no mention of the positive.. Only the negatives! And it was not until I called you out on it that you agreed this trait can be a good thing. Which speaks volumes about you IMHO.. For future reference A more balanced approach, that mentions the pros and cons, would have brought a bit more credibility with it.
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Theres a reason for instrumenting a plane for test..
That being a pilots's 'perception' of what is going on can be very different from what is 'actually' going on. Last edited by ACE-OF-ACES; 07-25-2012 at 10:49 PM. |
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#3
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You should remember that it is not about this trait that we are talking, but how to get there! Willingly or inadvertently? Of course it was done, as a last resort, even as flick maneuvres were explicitly forbidden in the pilots notes. Also there are enough Spitfire fans which will point out every positive aspect possible. Even in a very specific thread where by now at least 50% of the posts are slightly or completely off topic. Even some of mine, sorry for that.
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Win 7/64 Ult.; Phenom II X6 1100T; ASUS Crosshair IV; 16 GB DDR3/1600 Corsair; ASUS EAH6950/2GB; Logitech G940 & the usual suspects ![]() |
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#4
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Intel Q9550 @3.3ghz(OC), Asus rampage extreme MOBO, Nvidia GTX470 1.2Gb Vram, 8Gb DDR3 Ram, Win 7 64bit ultimate edition |
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#5
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Ok, in the Mk II notes "AIR PUBLICATION 1565 B" is written:
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Win 7/64 Ult.; Phenom II X6 1100T; ASUS Crosshair IV; 16 GB DDR3/1600 Corsair; ASUS EAH6950/2GB; Logitech G940 & the usual suspects ![]() |
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#6
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Do you understand that none of the Operating Note warnings or NACA measurements include anything about long period oscillation. The RAE measured stick free oscillation. The NACA measured stick fixed. In otherwords, the early mark Spitfire was not a hands off aircraft. Left to its own devices, it would eventually destroy itself without pilot input in conditions it was divergent.
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#7
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You're repeating what I said yet you try to make it sound as if you disagree with me. Why?
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#8
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Can you name any aircraft, of any type, in any airforce, that was hands free during WW2, ie wouldn't eventually destroy itself without pilot input in conditions it was divergent? |
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#9
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Glad to see you agree with me I don't know if I would go as far as to say last.. I suspect the order in which it was used depended a lot on the pilot and how comfortable he was with it and the situation at hand. Quote:
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I realize there are blue and red biased members of this forum Just up until now, I always considered you to be pretty balanced.. but now I see you have your moments of bias too! Quote:
Topics are like a river.. They flow and bend and change direction.. No big whoop! Mater of fact I think one would be hard pressed to show any thread that has not had more than one or changing topics.. Except for the ones that get locked within the first page!
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Theres a reason for instrumenting a plane for test..
That being a pilots's 'perception' of what is going on can be very different from what is 'actually' going on. Last edited by ACE-OF-ACES; 07-26-2012 at 01:15 AM. |
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#10
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So what is this thread all about ? The stated purpose by the OP is:
This thread is going to cover the definable and measure stability and control characteristics of the Spitfire. It is not going to cover opinion outside of stability and control engineers. What this thread is not going to do: 1. Get into a debate about "easy to fly". It is not definable and has no bearing on the measured facts. 2. It is not going to discuss the sustained level turning ability of the aircraft. That is also measurable and definable. For Example, anyone who is capable of doing the math will see that the Spitfire outturns the Bf-109 is steady state constant altitude turns at low velocity. It has now become the OP's intent to raise this as an issue for the Bugtracker The issue is that a bugtracker item should be about some genuine bug. That assumes the author actually presents proof that the bug exists. Has he done that ? All I see is too and fro about Real World Spitfire stability. Not much about actual in game behaviour. The OP has stated that he doesn't even have the latest Beta version installed. http://forum.1cpublishing.eu/showpos...4&postcount=12 Now we have yet another huge thread (53 pages as of today !) with opposing views that has supposedly become the ammunition to support a Bugtracker entry that the CLOD Spitfire FM is porked stability wise. 53 pages of discussion but not as far as I can see ANY actual attempt to determine if the existing game FM is actually porked stability wise. The OP opined a while ago that he found the Spitfire hard to trim accurately in pitch .... and which he also said that would make sense considering the stability characteristics of the real aircraft... which (if we accept the stability argument is correct) implies that the current FM stability wise (at the time of his comment) is reasonable. So how about before raising a Bugtracker defect report the actual defect is demonstrated. For the record lest we forget The OP has also made comments like : ".......and a dangerous instability exhibited by the Spitfire." http://forum.1cpublishing.eu/showpos...4&postcount=34 Last edited by IvanK; 07-26-2012 at 06:07 AM. |
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