Hmmmm ... wonder if having rounds hitting the engine block is part of the calculation. That could explain twin-engine fighters having "glass jaws."
I'd think so too.
I admit that I'm not a very frequent flyer in two engined planes except the 110, but logically speaking, a two-engined plane would not have any engine block in front of him acting out as a gigantic shield.
Also, when it comes to the P-38, it's got a small egg-shaped cockpit that's separate from any part of the fuselage. The cockpit area is small, and does not have a long fuselage to puncture through to get to the pilot.
A shot from the 6'oc angle would almost always either strik the tail boom, or the short cockpit. I wouldn't think anything is strange - neither the frequency of pilot wounds, nor the frequency of tail busts.
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If there is anything fishy at all, it's the frequency of tail destruction which occurs in ALL planes. How many times have you flown in AH, to lose only a single horizontal stab? Never in my years of AH flying, have I ever lost a single stab. It's always two horizontal stabs gone at the same time, which throws the plane off balance.
However, the funny thing is, during off-line testing I did find out that it was possible to destroy only one horizontal stab.
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Maybe AH should strengthen the horizontal stabs/booms on all planes - so that there's a level of partial damage applied to the H-stabs.
For example, when we are hit in the H-stab, we lose the elevator, or the stab itself. Maybe the horizontal stab should also have something like "half blown away" - such as wings. AH wings have three different types of damage - wingtip, half wing, and wingroot(the whole wing). Maybe the Hstab should be like that too.. elevator destroyed, half of Hstab destroyed, and Hstab totally falling off...