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| IL-2 Sturmovik The famous combat flight simulator. |
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Thread Tools | Display Modes |
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#1
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FW 190
x 4 MG 151. 20 X2 MG 131 If you have bad luck and get one burst of one seconds of fire from fw. You will get 12 bullets x 4 = 48 hits of HE 20mm And 15 x 2 = 30 hits of 13 mm - HE - AP ? Maybe you can lost your tail section in a P47 for the amount of HE. Many aircraft have fuel tanks in the wings but are ignored.., others have ammunition. What I wonder is because some fuel tanks catch fire and others no. TD is doing a good job... But always will be a endless Work. Now TD is fixing many things. I only can tell, THANKS! Edited: some numbers Last edited by Mustang; 07-25-2013 at 08:33 PM. |
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#2
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Actually, the only single shot kill to the R-2800 is hitting the ignition, on top of the hub in the P-47. No armour or backup system there in real life, a clear one shot kill.
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#3
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If the answer to the last question is is a greater number than the answers to the the first questions, something is very wrong. Hitting one of the ignition coils(?) on top of the crankcase from over 200m is a classic Golden BB, and should be vanishingly rare. It is not vanishingly rare. cheers horseback |
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#4
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As most planes in the game, both the P-47 and the Fw-190 have complete internal collision boxes modelled. This is, individual models for each internal system with a rough shape and size.
This means that if the ignition system is shot out, is because a bullet indeed hit that small part of the engine. Now, there's another group of planes, which includes the Stuka and the P-39/P-63, that do not have any internal collision boxes at all. In these planes the damage to internal systems is determined procedurally every time a bullet hits the airframe. For the Stuka there's around a 60% chance for a incendiary bullet shot to the wing root to set the wing tanks on fire. I have once hit a P-47 with 80 20mm rounds (from a J2M) and it flew away. Other times a few hits from a 109 on the wing root will bring it down. Even on planes with complete damage models there's some randomness thrown in to make things more interesting and realistic. For example, back to the ignition system in the P-47, a bullet may not have enough force to knock out a magneto, but it may still sever some wiring and have the same effect. In the case of the F6F, as a Ju88 and Betty pilot I can attest to the engine toughness to both MG and cannon fire. |
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#5
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I've had more "one shot" instant stops in the P 47 than any other plane in the sim. Second place goes to the glass jawed P 40.
You could probably bring the IL2 P 47 down easily with a side arm, if they were available in the sim.
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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 |
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#6
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As for random numbers, only God can generate a truly random number; there is always a prejudice built into any system built by men, and it is pretty obvious here. When I run down and across the rear of a Betty at a 45 degree angle after a high 7 o'clock diving gunnery pass, and the rear gunner takes out my engine 3 out of 5 times in a QMB (my speed was in excess of 370 kts every time), that is not random. When I approach from a level 4 o'clock, and get my engine knocked out from 450 meters as often as once in five tries, that is not random. It is wrong. cheers horseback |
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#7
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Let me put it this way, without these pseudo random numbers every single hit would knock out the engine, break controls, set fires, tear wings, etc, every single time
And no, the game doesn't call a special "letsporkthep47.rnd()" function, it uses de very same random number generator for the whole game. So by your logic the entire game is wrong Also look at the size of the R-2800 distributors in this picture, each is as big as an human head. ![]() Now, I'm not claiming that the damage model is perfect as it is, and I don't fly the P-47 so I can only tell what I have seen when flying against it online. I would expect the engine to be somewhat more fragile, given the complex instalation with the turbocharger on the belly and all the plumbing it needs. But still it shouldn't have more probability to seize than the F6F or F4U. Personally I wouldn't guide by getting the engine killed on a single hit by AI, it always had that supernatural hability to do tremendous damage with few rounds. I have the same problem with the Hs-129 and AAA, it would aim directly to the engines and knock them down on a single hit, rarely it hits other thing that the very precise spot that kills the engines. |
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#8
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Someone here once posted an image of these damage boxes in a Zero, and the lack thereof in the P-39 (maybe it was you), but I couldn't track down the list of planes or the tool used to illustrate the damage boxes. Thanks, WokeUpDead |
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#9
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Long ago at the old UBI forum, Oleg did indeed say that single flak guns are modeled as a battery, to help with FPS issues in the sim.
__________________
![]() 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 |
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#10
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I remember being admonished on several occasions over the years that to penetrate a metal layer that not only thickness of the plate but angle of penetration is critical (usually after I pointed out that the vulnerability of certain aircraft from rear quarter attacks seemed awfully low). Penetrating multiple layers of metal at varying angles as would be necessary to damage the turbosupercharger system would be fairly difficult, even with multiple close range 20mm hits. If you have to penetrate multiple layers from multiple angles, it gets a lot harder to do meaningful damage, and the whole of the underside of the Jug was reinforced by that ‘keel’ I mentioned earlier, as well as the structural members that held the fuel tanks in place. I still think that the historical record shows both that making the kind of hits that are routinely made (or more accurately, credited) in the game and the amount of damage they are modeled as inflicting are excessive. Quote:
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One correction: the 56th FG came to England as the only fighter group in the 8th AF that had experience with the P-47, and they loved it. By contrast the 78th FG had originally been a P-38 outfit that got stripped of its aircraft and most of their experienced pilots for the North African invasion, and the 4th FG had originally been the RAF’s Eagle Squadrons flying Spit Vbs (and as the only source of experienced combat pilots, were stripped of a large portion of key leaders and their most promising pilots). The 78th and 4th FGs were not big fans of the Jug, and frankly sulked about it for most of their breaking in period. The 56th adapted and made the most of the Jug, while the 4th couldn't move on to the P-51 fast enough; its senior officers were trying to get the P-51 or P-51A before word about the Merlin version reached them. The 78th eventually resigned themselves to the Jug, and were one of the last groups to convert to the Mustang. Quote:
Corsairs and Hellcats got their combat starts in February and August of 1943, well before the Japanese had been beaten. The fact is that US Naval Aviators used the Corsair and Hellcat to break the IJN air arm’s back by spring of 1944; using the F4F or FM-2, it would have taken another six months (and hundreds more good men’s lives) at the least. cheers horseback Last edited by horseback; 07-26-2013 at 11:36 PM. |
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