Your numbers don't match mine but they were close enough to prove my point. Thanks for doing that for me.
I wonder if you fight in the arenas the same way you argue on the forum. Absolutely predictably.
Yes of course, your point was perfectly obvious and predictable from the start. I did the sums to illustrate it wasn't beyond the reach of any normal Aces High player to do so. I think I also managed to demonstrate my point about your needless arrogance and smugness, and how you only lift a finger on this forum to mock other people's efforts when they differ with you. Thanks for that
I imagined the figure would be something like 60 m.p.h. with a 0.5G loading before I even found the equation. I already told you you would be no use to this discussion because you are disabled with a complete lack of imagination and are too fixated on numbers. I told you twice the figure was irrelevant.
Flight modeling has two components a quantitive and qualitative aspect. I already knew the stall speed was modeled correctly before this thread was posted. So far so good. The qualitative aspect however is where the problem lies.
You say the "Ensign killer" description was just a story (I think it was actually 'Ensign Eliminator' wasn't it?). Firstly YOU have to qualify that - by your own definition of burden of proof - since your opinion differs with the historical description. Secondly if the real F4U1 was as docile in handling as the AH version then why did Vought modify the right wing with a bodge to calm the handling at slow speed?
If you refer back to my previous post you will notice I italicized a section regarding flight testing I did. I italicized it because I knew you would only be focussing on the numbers. I was able to hold the aircraft at the onset of stall with my
stick fully back to the stop. You said any powerful aircraft would be a handful when so slow. Seriously? As modeled in Aces High this has to be one of the most docile stalls of all the aircraft powerful or not.
What is the 0.5g stall speed of the Fw190A-8 with 25% fuel on the deck and 3 notches flaps? Could you similarly hold the 190 in this configuration (at it's undoubtedly higher stall speed)? No, you could not. Impossible. Go and do a back to back flight test if you want to see how HTC models an abrupt or even better described viscous stall. So it can be modeled in other words (before I have to endure another strawman about that).
I urge anyone to repeat the flight tests. The characteristics of the Aces High Corsair entering the stall does not match the historical description.
Consistency of modeling is all that is asked for. I don't think it's modeled accurately and apparently I'm not the only one who thinks that.