Originally posted by Bombjack
Since the G10 and D9 are completely different aircraft, there is no reason I can see to suppose that their WEP systems should be modelled identically. HT has said that the modelling is a necessarily compromised abstraction of reality, and this kind of analysis is therefore rather futile.
er couldnt the same be said for :
P51d
P47s
P38s
spitfires
la7/la5s
Niks/zeros
all i believe 5 mins wep 10 mins cooling?, all with COMPLETELY different engines and cooling systems
among others! but i havent tested all but then it isnt really down to me to test every plane in the game is it?
seems to me bombjack you know nothing about this system either.You merely have taken offence to this post because it questions an aircraft you associate with Luftwaffe types.You havent read what ive posted or tried to grasp the reason behind the question.You have just 'stuck your oar in' and tried to have a bash at me.
as to the 'necessary compromise of reality' and it being futile you are completely wrong.The point here is this:
either the LW Mw50 has been modeled into the equation fairly or it hasnt.
If you read back and visit the site ive posted it says the La7s could run on wep for only 30 seconds
Someone else said the pilots handbook on p47s and p51s says it could run from 3 to 5 minutes on wep
German litrature says 2 to 20 minutes with MW50 (book quoted in this thread)and 10 minutes on with GM1 nitrous and 5 minutes cooling before it can be used again fro 10 minutes up to a total of 43(from memory) minutes using this on off method.
if all engines in emergencies could be run ntil they blew surely those with water methanol or liquid cooling would run longer if run indefinately at high explosive tempretures? the methoanol whilst it lasts would help protect the engines right?
so in a game where we have to decide on some form of limit surely all should run up to that limit and cool at basically the same rate?(air cooled should be less efficient of course and if we can find information on the efficiency differences between liquid cooled systems then by all means factor that in) only those with extra systems(water methanol/nitrous) should gain extra bonuses ie slightly longer wep.the cooling aspect is what is the most confusing part here.Seems to me the limit mentioned in these books is the one recommended because further use causes damage/wear and tear maybe seizing?.If we have to impose a limit for the games sake surely the damage/wear/seizing aspect would make more sense.
now you tell me now , IF these things are TRUE this would not affect combat in WW2?
I CANNOT confirm this information is true that appears in the many books you can read.and i suspect HTC had the same problem.
Thus being unable to confirm the running tempretures or actual time the MW50 etc really had?, having no charts etc ? maybe HTC were right to use the system we have BUT are we never to question it? is it to be ignored forever more until some data does turn up? we must ignore all the quotes from actual WW2 pilots and some manuals and handbooks in favour of HTCs best guesstimate?
i hope you too can now understand finally why this was asked.
I want to fly these planes in combat exactly as they were if it is at all possible.Thats the whole appeal of this sim for me personally, how about you?.
like i said before if it turns out thats the way it has to be because thats the way HTC wants it then ok fair enough i'll play it for how it is, but i'll no longer feel it it a totally accurate representation.Im sorry but i prefer to believe what was on the manuals over the best guess a person can make some 60 years later.I should not be insulted for saying this either.I think they wrote those things in their documents for a reason and they were probably wep times recommended to avoid engine damage.
seems to me all countries made pretty good engines so for the sake of a game we can assume they all have pretty much the same lifespan if used within 'recomended' limits otherwise why did they bother recomending limited times for wep use at all? I think they probably ran tests with wep on full and found the engines seized or became damaged and lost power or something and forced them to recommend only certain durations in order to keep the thing flying longer and keep pilots alive.If we now have the arguement that if a pilot really wanted to he could run on wep for an indefinate period then it applies to every aircraft and therefore doesnt need to be factored in at all.I think if its to be fair the only thing that should affect the length of wep is the 'aids' that boost the engines and allow longer use of wep without considerable damage and their limit on fuel/specialised fuels(ie nitrous) capacity.I dont see how anything else could be a factor.Longevity of an engine used within its limits is pretty much the same.If you dont think so explain why we still have so many working original warbirds today some 60 years later?.And as for overuse in emergencies meaning 'some' could wep indefinately 'so it can be argued a select few aircraft could run almost indefinately' then this must also apply to all engines pretty much.If you dont agree on that, what information would you base the arguement on? books that mention their reliability? or the ol' pilots hanbooks? you see? if theres charts then FINE fair enough but it appears there isnt.
something made HTC decide these times and all thats asked is what it was.