Eagle: That's a foolish thing to say. Every WEP limit in this game was imposed for heat and damage related reasons. The reason you don't have unlimited WEP on any plane in this game is the same: There were limits put in place. Those limits were not to be exceeded per some T.O. or the pilot handbook. Here's a case of a pilot handbook. So what's the problem? What's the different between this and any piston plane's WEP limitation? HTC strives for historical accuracy, no?
Krusty, I hate to burst your bubble here, but that is entirely INCORRECT. There are many piston engines that could run practically forever at WEP, the real limit is the amount of additional 'stuff' in your boost tank. For example, the German MW50 contained enough mixture for 2 10 minute boosts before being empty. The GM-1 nitrous system was about the same, but you could extend it because there were 3 different settings for how much nitrous was added. The American 'Water-Injection' systems are just another name for the same thing - they are injecting a 50/50 mixture of water and alcohol (either methanol, or ethanol works too) for the anti-detonation cooling effect. WEP without a water injection system is typically them just injecting extra fuel to do the same thing, but it not as efficient.
The PW2800 in a P47 was fed by a 30 gallon water-methanol tank. You had about 20 minutes worth, and once that was gone, say goodbye to WEP. To certify the engine for the US Government as being 'qualified' to use WEP, Pratt & Whitney had to run a 2800 continuously for 7.5 hours: 5 hours with alternating 5 minutes on / 5 minutes off WEP cycles, and then 2.5 hours continuous at full WEP. This supposedly wasn't much of a problem since PW ran their engines for 100 hours at full WEP anyway. Here's a link to a bio on one of PW engineers that talks about this (he helped develop the water injection system for the Americans):
http://www.enginehistory.org/Frank%20WalkerWeb1.pdf In AH - we aren't modeling this limit (that is what I meant by unlimited WEP cycles) - I can run 10 minutes on / 5 Minutes off in a 109K4 as long as I have fuel. The MW50 tank never goes dry. Same for a P-47, a FW190, or any other ride using WEP through a boost tank of 'stuff'.
In P51s, (somebody check because I don't think they used water injection until the H model came out), using WEP required a full teardown inspection once you got back on the ground. That didn't mean your engine was going to fail after 5 minutes (I agree with you here), but the 'established limit' is there. That doesn't keep our P51s in AH from using 5 minutes of WEP over and over again, because we aren't modeling engine reliability limits.
Which brings me back to the 262 - originally the Jumo 004B was run at 9,000rpm - but was limited to 8,700rpm full military power for reliability reasons, and the manual tells the pilot to limit himself to 10 minutes usage. Since a Jumo 004B was going in for a full teardown at about 10 hours, I can see why they might try to get the pilot to limit his use of full military power. Since we have no worries about the engines spitting out a turbine blade because we aren't modeling reliability, I just don't see a reason to make the 8,700 rpm setting some kind of WEP thing. If anything, that might make the 262 modeling more 'unrealistic' - WEP in AH adds boost instantly, where the jet engine needs time to spin up. WEP in jet engines is an afterburner, and I don't want to see the 262 suddenly acting like it has a 300rpm afterburner for 10 minutes at a time.