Hi guys.
Noob question on terms.
Can you tell me what a rope is? I heard one guy say "setting up a rope" and another say
"setting a fake rope".
Have been flying P47-D-11
Thanks
It looks to me like the original subject was "Can you tell me what a rope is" with some confusion over what a fake rope may be, and if/how it differs from a "real" rope.
I think we've all done a pretty good job of describing and showing a basic rope, and have even gone into some detail on some more complicated versions.
I must admit though, I either disagree or am confused by your (Agent's) version of a "fake" rope, because to me it looks like it's anything but a "fake" rope. It just sounds like a more complex version, where you camoflage your E a bit to get him roped. It doesn't sound any more "fake" than if I
slowly bring my nose up enough so that the guy following me can't see the horizon anymore, before gradually increasing the climb angle so hopefully sucker him vertical before he realizes we're no longer in a shallow climb. He thinks we're in a shallow climb, but he's roped. If anything, it's a "fake shallow climb" not a "fake rope".
If the end result is him following you up into a stall, so you can reverse and shoot him as he wallows, isn't that a rope? What's fake about it? The beauty of a well-executed rope is that your opponent doesn't feel like he's really screwed, until he's really screwed. "Fake" rope says to me "Looks like a rope, but isn't"- not, "Doesn't look like a rope, but is". Fooling your opponent into getting himself roped, is roping him.
I'm also not in agreement that your opponent recognizing the rope and trying to dive away or stay level is a real problem. For one, it means the set-up for a rope isn't so hot to begin with, if he recognizes the E-differential is so great that there's no way in heck he's gonna try to follow you up (or if his skill-level and SA warn him against it- nothing works as poorly as roping someone who knows what it is, and knows what you're attempting). And, if the E-differential
is so different, it also means I have several different options to kill the fella, and unless I just want to kill the guy by roping him for some reason, I'll just choose a different option. Also, if the E-differential is that great to begin with, even if he gets roped, he's gonna be awful far below me when he stalls, which again, isn't such a hot set-up, IMO. Further, what does it say about the skill level and SA of said pilot, if he's willing to go vertical and stall out so far below you?
So he dives away or stays level... The premise here is that he's a slow plane, and I'm in a fast plane. I just dive after him and shoot him, or force him to turn and I shoot him, or force him to turn and zoom past and up, to repeat (and he might even come up on the rope at that point)... If he has enough seperation to turn HO on me as I dive in, A- we have that large E-differential, which got us here in the first place, and B- I still have lots of options. Possibly the simplist is to not go past him, but rather pull my nose back up and try for a rope right then, since he's already displaying a willingness to go HO, which is pointing his nose up at me, and again, he has less E, and just blew a bunch of it reversing for the HO. I don't even need to go up all that much, but just "loiter" a bit, waiting for him to stall. Bang! He's roped (or he turns away, so I can shoot him in the back).
If he dives away and I chase him, bleeding some of my E and reducing our E-differential, the option to rope gets
better IMO, because if he recognizes our E-states are closer, he'll hopefully be more tempted to follow me up as he turns and I zoom back up, thinking he'll get me at the top- Bang! He's roped!
The way the "fake rope" term is being used here, it looks to me like it's just going to cause unnecessary confusion.
We might be best off saying "Here's what a basic rope is- but be careful, there are a whole lot of different ways to rope someone, without him realizing he's roped until it's too late. They won't all be as obvious as this, and once you get fairly proficient at them you'll be able to play with some of those different varieties, and you should, because an experienced stick probably won't fall for the obvious ones"."