The gist of this argument seems to have boiled down to "since bombers flew slower in the war, they should fly slower in AH." This completely ignores why they flew slower (e.g tighter formations, fuel and engine conservation), which was a tactical decision, not a limit on the airframe.
I'm not sure why people want the abilities of the hardware to be limited by the historic tactics used. I personally would rather see all the hardware perform to their full potential.
This would be a similar argument to slowing the buffs in AH: Most WWII tanks did not fire on the move. They stopped before firing. Therefore, HTC should model the tanks such that they must come to a complete stop before they can squeeze the trigger.
well I think theres 2 separate issues with buffs speeds;
some of the buffs (eg B-17 and B-24) have ahistorical power modelling, meaning that they have unlimited use of settings which were only available for 5mins IRL. this is in contrast to our fighters which have some kind of time-limited WEP. just imagine the complaints if the Spit XIV or F4U-4 had unlimited WEP...
the other issue is that we dont generally have the constraints you mentioned so buffs are flown at speeds which are alot higher than they would typically have used IRL. maybe not such a big deal in the MA where you can have 1945 fighters taking on 1930s buffs, but becomes an issue in scenarios and such. if youve ever flown a Hurri I in a BoB event, you'll wonder how the RAF ever managed to intercept lw bombers.
I wouldnt want to put artificial constraints on buff performance, but for events it would be good to simulate the RL constraints ie. fuel limited to just enough to climb out at normal power, then the rest of the sortie at cruise settings or you will run outta gas.
Beef, the idea isnt to make it
easier to attack buffs per se, just
possible using historical tactics.