I have too much time on my hands, I am in a place where I can’t really play on-line, I am away from home at a Hotel and will be until Sunday or this weekend. Even though I have been working very long hours, my mind is on a problem.
Here is the problem.
In Spitfires High, we are supposed to have the most realistic flight models of any flight sim. At least that is the common belief held by most of us, myself included…
However, we have without a doubt, irrefutable evidence that the 109s could deploy their flaps at very high speeds.
Now, imagine a Jug that couldn’t deploy it’s flaps until 180 mph. Or a Pony??? Or a Hog, or a F6, etc.
Can you just imagine what pigs they would be??? Who would fly them??
Now if we are in a game that can’t get the flaps right on the 109s, what else is not modeled right? Was the Hog, an airplane with an actually combat record of over 11 kills for each Hog shot down, really the dog it is in AH? Given the data posted on the manufacturers website, we can be a bit hesitant to say the real Hogs were as poor as they are in here. And we know that the F4U-4 was a 1944 airplane that saw lots of heavy combat in late WW2. We know that they often carried 4 20mm Hispanos
F4U-4 • F4U-4B: This airplane was equipped with four 20-mm cannons instead of 50-caliber machine guns (used in the early F4U-4 production) and eight 5-inch rockets under wings or up to 4,000 pounds on centerline and pylon racks. Vought built 297.
• F4U-4C: Many F4U-4’s became F4U-4C’s with four 20-mm cannons in the wing instead of six 50-caliber machine guns which were used in the early F4U-4 production.
By the end of 1944, Chance Vought was turning out 300 Corsairs a month, or one complete airplane every 82 minutes. A total of 5,380 F4U’s were built during the year (1944) of those planes 40% were the -4 models.
2045 F4U-4 and F4U-4C were built. And 297 F4U-4B were built.
More F4U-4s were built than -1D’s
Yet this obviously abundant aircraft, is perked to the roof in a MA that lets Spit16s and LA7s run around unperked,
We know that the data has been presented showing that the 190s also had flaps that would deploy at much higher speeds. And the TA152 is not even close to reality modeled.
There is so much eveidence that the planes are not modeled correctly, or that damage by American high velocity 50 cal shells was much more effect than modeled in the game. German 20mms were very nasty, but not in Spitfires High.
We know that many planes had almost infinite wep, but if wepped to long, engine life was greatly shortend. Wep isn’t modeled correctly.
Views are porked in some planes, WEP in others, stall characteristics in some planes are very suspect…
It just makes you wonder about what you don’t know…..
But if Pigs could fly, they would be become a 109 or a Hog in Spitfires High.