I'd be willing to bet this scenario is the single biggest cause of new guy 'cheater' whines in the game.
I've never heard the term 'specific energy' and Google has failed me at least as far as how it applies to aircraft. What does it mean and how do you apply it to ACM?
Wiley.
I learned this a couple of years ago, and it really started some things clicking for me personally with respect to energy overall, and how it applies practically.
(Glossed over some things here in the interest of simplicity).
If you merely think about energy as speed and altitude, it ignores the impact of weight. If we consider the impact of weight on the maneuvering energy of the aircraft, then we get a better comparison of how much energy each aircraft has for maneuvering.
With this in mind, its easy to see how a Spit 16 (that weighs 9,000 lbs) flying at 15,000 feet and 380 mph TAS could have more "energy" than say a P-47N (at 16,000 lbs) flying at 20,000 feet and 380 mph. I didn't do the math to check that result, but you get my point hopefully. This is why higher is not always better, as Bozon and others stated earlier.
I probably shouldn't have used the term "specific energy" as it has a different actual meaning, but basically, you want to account for weight when you compare aircraft. 400 mph isn't as useful when you weigh 40,000 lbs as it is when you weigh 12,000.