I'd be against artificial
"detuning" any aircraft purely for the sake of game play, where we have good historical information for climb rate, top speed, etc, AH should reflect it.
But I agree with BnZs point of view.
What about robustness in dives or under Gs? I've read nothing to suggest the Dr.1 should be more robust than the Camel in this area. Or even equal to it. If you can point me to some that suggests otherwise, I would be much obliged.
This will probably get me burned at the stake, but may I suggest that if there are some "unknowns" in how the planes should be modeled, maybe it would be good for gameplay to opt for modeling these "unknowns" in a way that leads to a balance of relative plane strengths?
"What about robustness in dives or under Gs?"I think this is one area that really could do with a review in AH. There's no doubt a WWI aircraft should shed a wing if pushed too far, and AH wouldn't be representative of WWI flying if the aircraft didn't, but the point at which this happens is subjective at best.
"under Gs"Like BnZs, I've also seen nothing to suggest the Camel was any worse than the Dr.1 in this respect, or in fact the D.VII was weaker still than either of them. Yet in AH in a sustained spiral dive the D.VII can only pull until approximately half the screen is blacked out before shedding a wing, the Camel fairs slightly better pulling until just a small circle of day light remains, while the Dr.1 fairs much better pulling all the way to blackout and more.
Without historical data for how much "G" a factory fresh aircraft could pull, (remember we don't model poor quality control construction methods, engines that regularly failed or quickly lost performance after use, airframes that quickly rotted and lost strength in the wet weather of the Somme, only a factory fresh perfect example of the design every sortie) I would like to see the aircraft "evened out".
It probably isn't representative for WWI to be able to pull G with impunity, so say using the Camel as a bench mark, adjust all the aircraft so they can "pull until just a small circle of day light remains" and level the playing field in this respect.
"robustness in dives"I've read many accounts of both sides recommending a high speed diving attack as the preferred fighting method, yet in AH this seems to be a highly suicidal approach. Whether they were be able to dive to a higher (unloaded) speed before suffering damage or whether the rapidly increasing drag at speed meant they just reached a terminal velocity sooner, I don't know.
Take this example from the notes given to
student Camel pilots.

1b. goes to great pains to advise the student not to turn right until he know the machine thoroughly
yet
2c. advises to learn to shoot whist diving as steeply as possible
Note: No warring here about the likelihood of the wings coming off.
It's not the advise I would give a student pilot flying the AH Camel!