Okay you WWII Navy experts, was it possible for an arresting cable on any WWII aircraft carrier to throw an aircraft BACK off the carrier into the water after the aircraft landed and caught a cable?
How many cables were strung for landings? Were all equally effective or were some less effective than others?
It's my impression that after an aircraft hook caught a cable, the cable reeled forward under tension to slow and stop the aircraft, then the cable was slackened to the deck. I've never seen or heard of anything like any cable then reversing backward. Seems like an impossible quirk that designers and everyone else would never tolerate.
Is this impression right or wrong?
As you probably know, in Aces High there are many gripes (mine included) about being thrown back off a carrier after landing successfully.
I pull back the throttle and cut the engine and sometimes it still happens, apparently at random.
Point is, no matter what the pilot does, the cable should never throw the plane off the cv. True or false? If true, Aces High should fix this bug, right?