Originally posted by Blagard
Good Grief. In either of the first two you can't fly well if you need gear drag as well in a desparate attempt to drop from 200mph due to a hopelessly reckless approach.
I'm not sure what you mean by hopelessly reckless. If you have been gliding without an engine for a while back to base, you are certainly going to overestimate to make sure you at least can make it to the runway. In landing on a carrier in such a situation, overestimation is even more important. You may find yourself crossing the threshold of the runway/flight deck at 200mph or so. Why not drop the gear at its earliest possible time, so you, in turn, can plop down safely at the earliest possible time?
And how is forcing an overshoot considered "reckless"?
Originally posted by Blagard
In some a/c you will not even be slow enough to drop flaps for landing!
Which aircraft are these? I'm not doubting you, I'm just curious. I'm pretty sure I've attempted a landing with every aircraft in the game, and I can't remember one that I couldn't drop flaps in.
Originally posted by Blagard
No dispute that gear adds drag but it is relatively small compared to other means
Every bit helps, if the situation calls for it. No point in not taking advantage of something positive your aircraft can provide you with.
Originally posted by Blagard
Just chopping the throttle to force an overshoot with some yaw will work I think you are overating the amount of drag you get from the gear over and above what you get from other actions.
I may be overrating the amount of drag, but, again, every bit helps. Obviously yaw will work better, but in situations where you know that once the bogey overshoots you can knock him out of the sky, the less yaw the better. Your nose will be in a better position to take that shot.