the ability to maneuver while flying slowly ...
which the hog was not noted for either in TRW ...
The rolling scissors isn't about flying slowly.
The rolling scissors is about creating an overshoot. Getting slow, believe it or not, is a poor way to accomplish that.
As a matter of fact, being slower than your opponent is why you're on the defensive anyway. Getting even slower ain't gonna fix the problem. If anything, getting slower practically ensures that you'll remain on the defensive. Getting slower will limit your maneuverability at a time when you need all that you can get. You create the overshoot by maneuvering to create angles and closure.
As a matter of fact, if I'm going to be using a rolling scissors (in an F4U, as that's what I fly) I'm defensive, and trying my best to BUILD and MAINTAIN speed. NOT TO SLOW DOWN. If I get too slow, I can't maneuver the way I need to, and I won't be able to transition to the offensive when I have the opportunity. I'll be dropping flaps in a rolling scissors, and managing throttle too, and slowing down will result from that.
Although it's a result,
it isn't the goal.
Maybe someone who flies the hog more than I do can do things differently, but I find once my speed gets below 120mph (again, in the F4U) my ability to maneuver is practically nil. That's what, 50% above stall speed? There are points in my maneuvers where I'll slow down A LOT, but I'm not doing much maneuvering at all at those points...
Can you show us different results?
Here's a film of a rolling scissors. Short, sweet, and to the point. Drag the bad guy away from the crowd. Separate him from his buds if I can. Convince him I want to run, so he'll keep his speed up too (that will help me with the overshoot, as the faster he is, the faster I can be). "Dragging" him will also degrade his speed advantage, if he has one- note how similar we are in speed before I initiate the maneuver?
Speaking of speed- how slow do I go? The slowest I got was 122mph (and only for a second), and while I was slow, I wasn't asking much of my ride... (Note- I consider 120mph to be awful slow, even
too slow, in a hog). When I needed maneuverability, I was faster than that. For my final shot, I was what, 165-170mph? Here's the kicker- how do our speeds relate? Look at how much time I spent with my speed actually being greater than his? How does this work? How does he go from behind me to in front of me, if I'm faster than him??!??! The rolling scissors isn't about speed, or speed differential, it's about flight paths, angles, and closure. Being "fast enough" allows me to maneuver to control those variables.
Start by getting some closure, the easiest way I've found is to get him approaching from the side. Draw him into a lead shot, pull up out of his way before he can hit you, and then roll around him.
It starts as a Barrel Roll Defense, and progresses into a rolling scissors only if he agrees to play. Fly a longer path than him, while covering less ground (less forward progress). As he squirts out in front of you, shoot him.
http://www.4shared.com/file/173258664/ed95be6e/P38_overshoot.htmlThis isn't a thread about "how to do a rolling scissors", so I was tempted to not explain it. At the same time, it's hard to "counter" something, when you don't understand it to begin with...