Sure its not true, if it was not why do you think i would say 10% ? I've had it happen to me before. many people have hit me a few times, being lucky .
Now for you mtn, i may have said things that you quite don't understand, first off, do a dive to confuse your enemy, second is a bank (turn left or right) which is used also to confuse your opponent, it helps give you a better chance of not getting hit, if you just nose downword its just going to change the range at which your opponent may be shooting from, this bank is not done hard enough to lose air speed, this tactic works, and works well, reason why ? I've done it many times, and 9 times out of 10 come out alive .
I call it (A trick to Fools) tactic.
First off, I'm a person who see's absolutely nothing "wrong" with an HO shot. That doesn't mean I take them, or train folks to take them. I just see them as a valid, valuable (from a fight-quality viewpoint) tactic. And, I see it as one of the most simple, basic tactics for putting a bullet into your opponent. It's a "low-odds" tactic though.
I see it like this- two highly experienced master-black-belt-or-whatever martial artists stand off face to face. At the instant the fight begins, one of them kicks the other in the groin, ending the fight. The guy rolling around on the ground whines "BS choice of tactics! You dweeb! You didn't even try to karate-chop me! Groin-kicking tard!" The way I see it, if one of them isn't skilled enough to recognize the most simple, obvious threat, and defend against it, the fight
should be over.
That said, (Buck) your initial dive has defeated the topic of the thread. By entering your dive, you've eliminated the HO. Done deal. Of course, you've now opened yourself up to a front-quarter shot, but the
HO threat is gone...
Thankfully, front-quarter shots are a lot easier to avoid than HO's. All you need to do is offset yourself a bit vertically, and ideally a bit horizontally, and you've made yourself a tough target to hit. If you can add in presenting a small profile, and doing it all while pointing your nose in a beneficial direction for a reversal, even better!. Now add doing it without scrubbing excess E. And just for good measure, lets make it tempting to the other pilot to pull hard for a bad shot, which scrubs some of his E, and since we're tempting him to point his nose where we want, let's try to make that a bad direction for him to prepare to reverse , or maybe even to maintain his SA.
Where does that leave us? In an advantaged position over our opponent, in several ways. And this has taken how long? At the expense of how much E?
I'm going to tack a few films on here that show a few HO attempts, and if you watch closely, you can probably pick out many "HO-possibilities" that I simply don't allow to occur, due to the choices I make in maneuvering. Look at what taking the HO shot does to his position, and what dodging it does to mine in the first film.
http://www.4shared.com/file/qpAsV313/1Stblood_high_spit16_b17s.htmlKind of wrecks his chances to be a threat in the rest of the fight, doesn't it? No fancy dodges on my part, just some simple offsets. Sometimes the vertical offset needs to be below him, other times you're better off above... It depends on what?
Another one, same pilot a few minutes later. My offsets here don't even make it worth his effort to fire. But, see how he sets up his approach the same way? What was his intent? So we reverse... What's he looking for at about :55-1:00? What does it do for his position 5-10 seconds later?
http://www.4shared.com/file/Mf4Yn_DV/1stblood_again.htmlAnd one more-
http://www.4shared.com/file/O-qfBLYs/Me_v2_F4U_and_Zeke.htmlAny HO-possibilities there? They may
not have taken the opportunity to shoot HO. But 2v1's are tricky... Best bet is to ALWAYS ASSUME THE HO IS A THREAT. Maneuver accordingly. But not wastefully.