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#271
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I doubt you would have any aircraft fllying in formation doing 90 degree snap rolls to check six in real life.
As per usual, the AI continue their cheating ways, doing things no human pilot would or could do, all the while maintaining perfect trim under all conditions. At least we do have an answer to a burning question no one ever asked, "What would a totally autonomous Skynet drone Bf 109 fly like"? ![]()
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![]() Personally speaking, the P-40 could contend on an equal footing with all the types of Messerschmitts, almost to the end of 1943. ~Nikolay Gerasimovitch Golodnikov |
#272
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I'm not sure if there's much difference between AI-controlled plane and autopilot-controlled plane but all autopilot-controlled planes lower flaps at speeds which normally make the flaps jam. It's easy to check - break autopilot when entering dogfight, the flaps are usually down and they get stuck solid (very irritating when you've been flying 10 minutes on autopilot and time compression to speed up the mission). Spitfires even lower half-flaps, which is something historically bogus and impossible - the Spitfire flaps had two positions: up or down.
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#273
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Although rolling, banking and turning is very realistic for a veteran pilot flying solo in a combat zone, it's not so realistic for planes flying in formation. In formation, it was more typical for each pilot to be assigned a particular part of the sky to watch, or for the formation to slightly change direction at random intervals, or flying a weaving pattern, to check to below or to the rear. In some cases, one plane was assigned to be a "weaver" or "tail end Charlie." The weaver flew slightly behind the formation and flew a weaving and banking pattern to check below and behind. The problem with this was that the "weaver" burned more fuel than the other planes in the flight, which could be a problem on long missions. He was also more vulnerable to attack than other planes in the formation. When fighters flew close escort missions, they would often let the bomber gunners be their "eyes" to the rear and below. Alternately, they'd just break into combat pairs and randomly weave along their assigned course, both to check the sky and to help match speed with the slower bombers. So, it would be more realistic to disable rolls and banks for planes in formation. And, if TD wanted to do even more AI work, it would also be cool if they could implement some or all of these options. 1) Formations where each plane was detailed to watch a particular sector (and commands to make a plane in your formation watch a particular sector especially closely). 2) Formations where the formation weaves either randomly or at set intervals while maintaining a particular course. (And commands to tell your formation or a particular element of your formation to do this, or to stop doing it.) 3) Formations where the last plane in the flight acts as a "weaver", acting as described above to check below and to the rear of the formation. (And commands to tell one or more planes in your formation to drop back and weave, or to stop doing so.) 4) Commands to tell your formation (or parts of it) to orbit either a location on the ground or another formation of planes. 5) Commands to tell certain planes to take station ahead, behind, above, below or to the side of another formation of planes. Commands 4 & 5, combined with an order to weave could allow the player to assign a "tail end charlie" when the default formation doesn't allow it, or could be used to arrange close escort fighters around a bomber formation. |
#274
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What is the smoke thing that you remove for old version?
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#275
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Smoke objects that mission builders liked to use for steam locomotives.
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#276
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Here is something that wasn't fixed in 4.12.1.
A6M5c and A6M7 equipped with Type3 air-to-air rockets don't attack other planes. |
#277
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Came with 4.12, and only effected some. Probably the drunk ones.
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#278
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Vodka is flammable, after all...
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#279
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Woah, what was the loiter command change and why was it reverted?
I noticed for the first time the darn command worked!! |
#280
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So sadly no fix this time for the taxi/land problem.
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