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IL-2 Sturmovik: Cliffs of Dover Latest instalment in the acclaimed IL-2 Sturmovik series from award-winning developer Maddox Games. |
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#1
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In reality planes were hardly ever 100% combat ready. There were always extra challenges. Sims have not, till now, had the fidelity to simulate these challenges well. Some create scenarios and random chances of failures to test pilot skill (Ms flight sim for example) but these have little bearing to the pilot's skill in handling the craft prior to failure. As such, sims have always lacked the 'granularity' of real flight and aircraft. The ability to finally simulate these kinds of events and failures should be seen as a major step forward, not back. Let's not forget that many great pilots, for example Marseille, lost their lives to nothing more than engine trouble. In reality? No way in hell. Last edited by irR4tiOn4L; 04-18-2012 at 09:33 AM. |
#2
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you might want to compare instead the relation between losses through enemy action and other operational losses for the Me 109 for all units of the Luftwaffe for the time period in question. using a reliable data source, for ex " Flugzeugbestand und Bewegungsmeldungen, 3.42 - 12.44" states as results: Quote:
you cant claim one isolated group record like you are doing ( and even then i dont trust your numbers, have you been reading kurfurst's site maybe ?) and then extrapolate to large generalities and try and draw conclusion. % wise compared to combat losses, the german units saw much more intense action and combat losses were much higher, even then for them as a total of aircraft losses, directly related landing and takeoff accidents are still responsible for 1/3 of all 109's lost (and this is with trained pilots, not pc armchair wannabe's with a bad attitude and a short attention span who have never even flown ANY aircraft). if most of us were plonked down in the seat of a 109 and told to takeoff, most of us would simply not make it ![]() for ex, in the Finnish Air Force 69% of the accidents being take-off/landing related (does not specify if aircraft lost or damaged), while in JG 26, the share is just 22% (a likely reason being maybe more highly trained pilots at the start of the war ? since stats are counted over the 5 war years, and german 109 pilots had time on these aircraft since 1938 approx ?). another reference text (Suomen Historia) provides the following information on all of the finnish 109 losses during their part in the war: Total war-time losses: 61 aircraft Losses at landing: 9 aircraft Losses at take-off: 10 aircraft that is 31% loss of their total number of available aircraft directly documented, counted aircraft per aircraft on incidents directly at takeoff or landing. there were 29 "accidents" total, 19 or 20 losses being directly in take-off/landing, the others to mechanical and fuel related faults (not combat related). another poster summarizes the context and difficulties rather well for the german 109 pilots Quote:
conclusion, direct aircraft loses in takeoff and landing could be argued down to being just over 30% if you want to be very strict on the definition of terms, but when you look at that in context of the total non-combat losses being 50% of all 109's lost, you will find that even if the residual 20% is not quoted as direct landing/takeoff, it would still be a related to malfunctioning 109 having to try and make it back safely onto the ground for emergency landings or the pilot having to bail out and abandon his machine, and for the 109 this was much more hazardous than most other single seat fighters of the same period. so yes, it is very close to the number i quoted, and for the 109 specifically this was a major problem. and this historical behavior and hard to land/take-off is NOT represented in CoD right now
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President Dwight D. Eisenhower 1953: Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed. This world in arms is not spending money alone, it is spending the sweat of its laborers, the genius of its scientists, the hopes of its children Last edited by zapatista; 04-18-2012 at 11:49 AM. |
#3
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I agree that this could be modelled better - not just on the 109, but on ALL aircraft, since its way too easy to land and take off from all surfaces with all aircraft at the moment. Theres a reason emergency landings were done gear up!
But in all seriousness, this is not a training simulator and its primary purpose is not to teach you proper landing and take off procedures. This issue trails far behind many others. Also, the simulation of proper attrition rates of 109's due to landing/take off accidents is not something that will add significantly to this sim. Most people fly CoD for the combat that happens IN the air, not the feeling of schadenfreude invoked by enemy 109's getting INTO it. Last edited by irR4tiOn4L; 04-18-2012 at 09:54 AM. |
#4
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Landing and taking off really isnt that hard, done it loads of times as a kid in a light a/c and i think its modeled very well as it is, landing could be a little more tricky i will admit to that.
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#5
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Sounds well informed, zapatista!
![]() So then... you should do your job and report it to bugtracker ![]() |
#6
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Always wondered, when compared to the – for example – Spitfire, the same kind of narrow track, same (almost) the Wingspan, similar airplane configuration, dimensions, engine power, etc... What is the reason why it is said that many of the 109 suffered an accident during landing?
Then I realized... Usually the 109 landed after the fight, but the Spit's pilot hung on the Chute ![]()
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![]() ![]() i7 7700K 4.8GHz, 32GB Ram 3GHz, MSI GTX 1070 8GB, 27' 1920x1080, W10/64, TrackIR 4Pro, G940 Cliffs of Dover Bugtracker site: share and vote issues here |
#7
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#8
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The 109 was also knock-kneed. If I'm right, when the ac "leaned" towards a tire, that tire ran in an arc opposite the lean, exacerbating the problem.
The Spit chute had no such tendency ![]() |
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