I don't need to be a real life pilot to know when someone is talking nothing but BS...
ack-ack
Yeah but it surely helps as does having walked up to and seen the actuation of flaps on many warbirds in person and discussing it with guys like howard wolko as you are watching the surfaces actuate.
Me and Nels Wolko, his son, used to get lectures from howard on how the various control surfaces worked on the RC airplanes we built in his workshop.
Flaps allow more lift at slower speeds but with a substantial penalty of drag and do not allow higher angle of attack.
Slats allow more lift at slower speeds by allowing more angle of attack to be utilized.
My argument is that the flaps in aces high are allowing more angle of attack instead of simply increasing lift and lowering stall speed while the slats don't offer any more useful angle of attack than the flaps do yet they also add greatly to the drag even at zero angle of attack.
In real life, you don't pull more angle of attack when using flaps but rather use the additional lift to get around more quickly when in a high G banked turn at the same angle of attack.
My point is that I know how they work, have discussed it with people who regularly fly planes with slats and flaps, and have flown a pretty good variety of planes myself.....thought most of them did not have slats.
I just think a few things could use a little adjustment for the sake of reality but HTC has to walk a fine line between full realism and having a sim where the extreme realism brings on enough difficulty that people decide they don't enjoy flying it.
This is why you don't see spins as easily entered by pulling hard Gs with controls crossed as you did in warbirds before version 3.
A sim is no good if nobody want's fl fly it.
I don't have the exact numbers but neither does anybody else on this thread.
The experienced may not need the exact numbers because experience here and in the real world would indicate flaps and slats don't quite act as they should..........close, but some inaccuracies that could be closer.