2nd time I've blacked out in a situation where either both guys should've blacked out or niether guy should've blacked out. Something is wrong with the way this stuff is modelled, imo.
Just now, dove on a 190 in a P-51B. 190 pulls up into a loop, I chop throttle and pull up after him, in lag pursuit. He comes out of the loop into a powerdive, I follow with throttle chopped. After we get to about 400 mph, he's about 600 yards ahead of me. He then pulls up into another loop. I again follow in lag pursuit, with throttle still chopped, get halfway up, then blackout and auger by the time I wake up. He apparently never blacked out.
So how is it possible for a 190 going ~400 to pull a loop tighter than a P-51B does and not black out doing, if the P-51 blacks out while pulling a loop that obviously isn't as tight, since it is in lag pursuit? Can someone answer that for me? The rationale behind it just escapes me.
The time before that I'm in a flat break turn waiting for some plane zipping up my 6 with tons more energy to overshoot trying to follow me.. I black out.. 2 seconds later he shoots me down. So apparently he was able to actually pull LEAD on a plane that was turning so hard the pilot "blacked out".. all without blacking out. Again a situation that leaves me wondering how it is possible.
Anyway, something is screwy with the blackout model, in my opinion.