Aces High Bulletin Board
General Forums => Aces High General Discussion => Topic started by: VAMPIRE 2? on March 09, 2011, 08:45:01 PM
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:furious ok so I love going to the DA and try to learn a few things to improve. even if i'm unsuccessful at staying up longer than two min per sortie, AND get frustrated, I still enjoyed the time spent! but when the top notch guys are "showing you ways to improve" I often wonder what they leave out, knowingly or not. for instance 2 equal planes in the scissors and your telling your "newby" -me-
"keep your nose up," "pull harder," "be more aggressive," I often wonder "how did I once again get in this predicament?" and "why am I again on the defensive and have to hold my nose up, and not him?" any way, I'm sure I'm not the only one who feels this way. -------by the way this refers to 1v1 situations-------
so I do learn from these scenarios that I suck. but is that it? I just suck? don't get me wrong I still enjoy the 1v1, but it would be nice to graduate from suck to newb killer. :lol
or even total suckage up to just a standard suck tard. any advise?
I was last told to think positively... I have the book "with winning in mind" but I'm having a hard time applying my knowledge from that book to my royal suckage! where is one of thes?--> :old:
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Practice makes perfect.
Film your sorties with the guy helping you out - when you die go watch the film and learn what happened. It is hard to learn it while you are doing it, until you get to a certain point.
If you are into reading, a guy named Robert Shaw wrote a book called Fighter Combat: Tactics and Manuevering. I highly recommend it.
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Don't depend all on the person trying to help you, WATCH THE FILMS!!!
;)
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If you cant quite grasp what your seeing in the films, post them in the training section and ask one of the trainers to critique them (when they have time). Be patient, practise and have fun - Rome wasn't built in a day (took at least a weekend from what I vaguely understand :D)
Wurzel
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Check out the Help & Training forum. Post a request for some help. Chances are you get a reply from a trainer who will share some knowledge with you.
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Check the option to auto-record sorties in the clipboard. It won't fill your hard drive with useless films because it asks you if you want to save it at the end of the sortie, and the files are rather small anyway. I'd recommend naming sorties that you die in something along the lines of "Death 51D v 47M" or something like that to keep them all close together in the folder.
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You can also post the films here for the "masses" to critic. Listen to the guys you respect, and ignore the rest :D You'll get a lot of good tips.
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You can find some good sticks in the DA. When you are new it's hard to tell who is actually good and who is just better than you. It's also hard to tell what advice is good and what is wrong or misguided. If you are getting advice that you don't understand just ask for an explanation. If the explanation isn't clear then the advice is unlikely to be useful.
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Gonna throw this out here, Vampire is not new but has a strong desire to learn.
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Gonna throw this out here, Vampire is not new but has a strong desire to learn.
I mean you new guys that have only been here a couple of years. :old:
:D
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Oh yeah, and don't ever get stuck in a flat scissors against me ;)
Vampire, its all about timing and being able to pull back one little bit more than the other guy while keeping your plane from completely stalling yet still being in the 'buffet'. It all really comes down to practice. The difference between the best and the good is less than a fraction of a second in timing, and getting that timing down just takes tons of time and dieing over and over again.
Anytime your on, I'll be happy to DA you, as I know you already know this.
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Thats where I learned all my moves....
SunsFan gave me some tips on how to merge
Grizz told me about having a less predictable flightpath
Krup has DAed me probably a good 500 times so I learn from all the deaths
Ardy123 lets me smack him around so I can get smacked around by the names above HAHAHAHAHAHHAAHA
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You can get all the training in the world and not learn a whole lot. The key to it is repetition and feel. Keep going out there and getting killed. Eventually, you'll find that you're not getting killed so often.
The trainers and people that give you tips are only pointing you in the right direction. The rest is up to you.
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Not to pick on anyone but some of the responses illustrate Vampire's point.
Watching films is more useful when you understand that ACM is about turn circles and energy states and that the tools of ACM are speed, G load, and pursuit curves. Analyzing films in those terms will teach you more than simply watching someone fly to your 6 and shoot you down.
It's true that timing is important but if you don't explain the visual cues of proper timing then that information isn't really useful.
Getting killed repeatedly is obviously not the historically accurate way to learn ACM. Learning the basic concepts so that you can apply them as analytical tools is what allows us to learn from our countless fatal mistakes. In real life, mock dogfights occur after learning to fly your aircraft to the limits and after the basic concepts of ACM are learned. First you train then you fight.
Training is available in the training arena and there is a training event scheduled for March 17 6-10 PM ET.
http://bbs.hitechcreations.com/smf/index.php/topic,308252.0.html
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Don't depend all on the person trying to help you, WATCH THE FILMS!!!
;)
*1q1111111111111111111111111111111111111111
watch the films from your cockpit, from his cockpit, from outside with trails on, watch the average speeds of both/all combatants.........the film viewer is a wonderful learning tool.
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One really good thing to learn from is to download the films of good sticks or ask the opponent to send them to you. Check em out from their views. You will see where they look, for how long, how they set up the shots, throttle response. Stuff you do not see from your film. ;) example would be of Agent360 films. :aok
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Also talk to different people, what I found over the years is I took little tips and advice from many different people. You may spend an hour dueling someone and if you can take one little lesson or new way of thinking about something away from that then it's a win.
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Also talk to different people, what I found over the years is I took little tips and advice from many different people. You may spend an hour dueling someone and if you can take one little lesson or new way of thinking about something away from that then it's a win.
This IMO is the best way to learn in Aces High.
I never had training from actual Trainers mainly just because my scedule could never fit in but the tips you get from dueling/flying with better sticks just makes you that much better.
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Gonna throw this out here, Vampire is not new but has a strong desire to learn.
But he will "suck" the blood right out of you:)
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One really good thing to learn from is to download the films of good sticks or ask the opponent to send them to you. Check em out from their views. You will see where they look, for how long, how they set up the shots, throttle response. Stuff you do not see from your film. ;) example would be of Agent360 films. :aok
you dont need the other persons film to watch it from their view,you can do that with your film also,
just click on their name in the film viewer while your watching it. :salute
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you dont need the other persons film to watch it from their view,you can do that with your film also,
just click on their name in the film viewer while your watching it. :salute
the problem with looking from the other persons cockpit in your own film.....is that you'll still see your own view switches.....unlsee that's been changed.....
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:furious ok so I love going to the DA and try to learn a few things to improve. even if i'm unsuccessful at staying up longer than two min per sortie, AND get frustrated, I still enjoyed the time spent! but when the top notch guys are "showing you ways to improve" I often wonder what they leave out, knowingly or not. for instance 2 equal planes in the scissors and your telling your "newby" -me-
"keep your nose up," "pull harder," "be more aggressive," I often wonder "how did I once again get in this predicament?" and "why am I again on the defensive and have to hold my nose up, and not him?" any way, I'm sure I'm not the only one who feels this way. -------by the way this refers to 1v1 situations-------
so I do learn from these scenarios that I suck. but is that it? I just suck? don't get me wrong I still enjoy the 1v1, but it would be nice to graduate from suck to newb killer. :lol
or even total suckage up to just a standard suck tard. any advise?
I was last told to think positively... I have the book "with winning in mind" but I'm having a hard time applying my knowledge from that book to my royal suckage! where is one of thes?--> :old:
As I did with you Vampire, I try to hilight your mistakes and talk you thru a fight against me while we are fighting. I hold nothing back, I honestly try to help you shoot me down. Even when i'm fighting squadies I will say things like "don't do that" or "there ya go now pull for the shot"etc etc.
The better you get and the harder it is to beat you the more rewarding the victory!
I hold nothing back my friend!!! :salute
BTW I've yet to watch a single film for my own learning!
JUGgler
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As I did with you Vampire, I try to hilight your mistakes and talk you thru a fight against me while we are fighting. I hold nothing back, I honestly try to help you shoot me down. Even when i'm fighting squadies I will say things like "don't do that" or "there ya go now pull for the shot"etc etc.
The better you get and the harder it is to beat you the more rewarding the victory!
I hold nothing back my friend!!! :salute
JUGgler
this i have found to be true of many of the good pile-its.
shuffler, soulss, have both helped me this way, ren in the ta, bigrat.......any of these guys will do all they can to help you out, and if asked, i try to help guys too. my problem is that half the time, i don't really know what i did to win a fight, and if i do, i don't know how to explain it.
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:furious ok so I love going to the DA and try to learn a few things to improve. even if i'm unsuccessful at staying up longer than two min per sortie, AND get frustrated, I still enjoyed the time spent! but when the top notch guys are "showing you ways to improve" I often wonder what they leave out, knowingly or not. for instance 2 equal planes in the scissors and your telling your "newby" -me-
"keep your nose up," "pull harder," "be more aggressive," I often wonder "how did I once again get in this predicament?" and "why am I again on the defensive and have to hold my nose up, and not him?" any way, I'm sure I'm not the only one who feels this way. -------by the way this refers to 1v1 situations-------
so I do learn from these scenarios that I suck. but is that it? I just suck? don't get me wrong I still enjoy the 1v1, but it would be nice to graduate from suck to newb killer. :lol
or even total suckage up to just a standard suck tard. any advise?
I was last told to think positively... I have the book "with winning in mind" but I'm having a hard time applying my knowledge from that book to my royal suckage! where is one of thes?--> :old:
I try to pass on all I can to help anyone who comes along. Take note as many are not very good at covering subtle moves. I find myself failing to pass along some things because to me they have become second nature. I simply do not notice that it is something I do when flying.
I know I pretty much suck at teaching because of this very thing. There are those that excel at teaching. We have several in the 80th. While I can enlighten you on many things, they can down right drill down and get you to the core of good cartoon flying habits.
As posted above.... film all your fights and delve into them often. Win or lose go back and see the WHY!!
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i lose most of my fights because the p-38's flight modeling is all wrong.........
that's my story, and i'm stickin to it. :devil :devil :noid :neener: