Originally posted by Widewing
So, you are saying that HTC has modeled "closed-throttle pumping losses of the engine"? I don't think so...
As a general concept, absolutely. The thing that makes a prop spinning at higher RPM slow an aircraft down more than a prop spinning at low RPM is closed throttle pumping losses (and some friction.) This is very clearly modeled. It is probably not calculated per piston or anything.... or even necessarilly different for various aircraft.

Using your approach, the F4U-4 should be among the worst. Huge prop, huge engine, large flat plate area, relatively high CDo.... Yet, it's just about the best at speed bleed.... How do you explain that?
The F4U-4 is outrageously heavy, much more so heavy than it has large flat plate area and high Cd0, I think. I have no numbers to back this up. Perhaps you can point me to your sources...

The F4U-4 is still a pretty slow-accellerating aircraft relative to late-war monsters, evidence of a modest power/weight ratio (indicating the decelerating effect of the prop will be modest relative to its weight.)
Also, the flat plate area of the P-51D is 4.10 sq/ft, with the La-7 coming in at 4.89 sq/ft. So, the P-51 is heavier, a lower Cdo and less flat plate area... Yet it bleeds speed faster anyway... Moreover, the P-51B, with a lower CDo than the P-51D (same flat plate area) bleeds speed faster than the D model. Why is that? Another mystery?
For the La, if what you are providing as measures for flat plate area are the same as what HTC is using for their drag model, then it would seem that something may be off. (Oh, and once you start talking flat plate area, the relative Cd0s are no longer really relevant, as that's part of flate plate area.) But if those flat plate areas are what HTC is modelling, the LA should be a bunch slower, I think.

What's your source for that LA number.. I'm really curious, as hard russian numbers seem as hen's teeth. (And I don't mean the XXX girls... those are easy to find..)

As to the P51s, they are quite close, B: 20.97, D:21.12 in my measure (at2k). And I'd say my margin of error is ~1/2 sec (so by my measure, you could call it either way.) They are darn close, the B might be a hair slipperier, but it's lighter by ~90lbs. What exactly is the difference in Cd0 between B and D? They have slightly different engine setups, too. Regardless, they are very much the same airframe, and very much the same in performance.
And yes, I am using zero lift drag figures... That's what CDo represents. CDo = CD − CDi where CD is total drag coefficient for a given power, speed, and altitude minus lift induced drag. CDo for the P-51B is 0.169. Lift induced drag is accounted for.
Um.. You just said that Cd0 is "... minus lift induced drag". What we are measuring by flying the planes level _includes_ lift induced drag, and thus won't follow Cd0 exactly. And what we can measure includes the prop, which these numbers should not, I don't think.
I'll repeat again that HiTech has stated that they have not modeled prop drag. Modeling means that they made a best effort to determine what it is and plug it into the code. What they probably did was plug in an arbitrary number that they figured was adequate. What you see when you change pitch is the difference between that arbitrary number and the resulting change. I doubt if HTC has any idea what the prop drag is for any individual fighter.
I'd need to see the statement by Hitech to understand the meaning of that. You first said, "HiTech previously stated that max RPM prop drag is not modeled.....", which could mean that drag induced by the prop at max RPM in a dive (beyond the max level speed), when the prop would otherwise be holding the airplane back (and over-reving the engine) is not modeled. This would not be relevant in what we're currently measuring, and while being really interesting, would be very hard to measure.
But to say that prop drag is not modeled is absurd considering the overwhelming evidence to the contrary. Perhaps it is one really huge bug that makes our planes slow down quicker when the props are spinning?

Unfortunately, your argument does not explain the speed bleed characteristics in Aces High.
Ehh.. perhaps not, but it's pretty close. I don't think your numbers support the La's speed, either, so perhaps it's a matter of different numbers instead of different concepts. The La is only inexplicable given your flat plate number.