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RoF and Flight. (Read 11985 times)
Reply #15 - Apr 11th, 2012 at 6:28pm

Strategic Retreat   Offline
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Bass wrote on Apr 11th, 2012 at 8:59am:
I took a flight with my sopcamel in rof. Luckwise the engine started without blowing up, but i sure hoped i had a parachute after meeting the enemy!!  Wink


The rotative engine used on the Camel is not remembered for blowing up while starting. Had a series of glitches that were the bane of the type of engine, which were the basic reason development of new planes using the rotative AND further developments of the type of engine were both abandoned already in the last year of the first world war to put resources behind the radials and the liquid cooled in-lines and V-placed pistons engines... but going nuclear in starting, I've sincerely never heard about it. If nothing else and in spite of its vices in flight, it was quite the sturdy workhorse. You sure you did not do anything... strange to it? Huh

That and, pilots in WWI never brought parachutes with them. It was the, sincerely absurd with the mindset of today, credo off the aviators of the time that the thing was cowardly, as it gave a pilot the choice to launch himself off the plane instead of remaining at the controls and fight to the last, and even dangerous... though I cannot remember why they thought it this last. So, had you had a parachute and used it, in refusing to virtually die crashing with your doomed simulated plane, you would have given your peers the right to declare you a coward... ouch... don't you feel so much better now, staring at the Virtual Pearly Gates, that they do not think you were a coward? Smiley

Ah, the good old times... WERE NOT SO GOOD, after all. Undecided
 

There is no such a thing as overkill. Only unworthy targets.
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Reply #16 - Apr 11th, 2012 at 8:53pm

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Strategic Retreat wrote on Apr 11th, 2012 at 6:28pm:
That and, pilots in WWI never brought parachutes with them.


Pilots of the RFC weren’t allowed to have Parachutes; the Top Brass thought it would induce cowardice.

German Fliers however were allowed Parachutes but many chose not to have them, not because they thought it was cowardly but because they were very heavy.

In those days, taking the guns off a fighter could increase its performance by 10-20 mph so pilots wanted as little extra weight as possible.

It should also be noted that Balloon Observers on both sides were issued with Parachutes.
 

...

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Reply #17 - Apr 12th, 2012 at 7:59am

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Strategic Retreat wrote on Apr 11th, 2012 at 6:28pm:
Bass wrote on Apr 11th, 2012 at 8:59am:
I took a flight with my sopcamel in rof. Luckwise the engine started without blowing up, but i sure hoped i had a parachute after meeting the enemy!!  Wink


The rotative engine used on the Camel is not remembered for blowing up while starting. Had a series of glitches that were the bane of the type of engine, which were the basic reason development of new planes using the rotative AND further developments of the type of engine were both abandoned already in the last year of the first world war to put resources behind the radials and the liquid cooled in-lines and V-placed pistons engines... but going nuclear in starting, I've sincerely never heard about it. If nothing else and in spite of its vices in flight, it was quite the sturdy workhorse. You sure you did not do anything... strange to it? Huh

That and, pilots in WWI never brought parachutes with them. It was the, sincerely absurd with the mindset of today, credo off the aviators of the time that the thing was cowardly, as it gave a pilot the choice to launch himself off the plane instead of remaining at the controls and fight to the last, and even dangerous... though I cannot remember why they thought it this last. So, had you had a parachute and used it, in refusing to virtually die crashing with your doomed simulated plane, you would have given your peers the right to declare you a coward... ouch... don't you feel so much better now, staring at the Virtual Pearly Gates, that they do not think you were a coward? Smiley

Ah, the good old times... WERE NOT SO GOOD, after all. Undecided


Well. Sorry if i used the word "blow", i was thinking of this:

Unlike the preceding Pup and Triplane, the Camel was not considered pleasant to fly. The Camel owed both its extreme manoeuvrability and its difficult handling characteristics to the placement of the engine, pilot, guns and fuel tank (some 90% of the weight of the craft) within the front seven feet of the aircraft, coupled with the strong gyroscopic effect of the rotary engine. The Camel soon gained an unfortunate reputation with student pilots. The Clerget engine was particularly sensitive to fuel mixture control, and incorrect settings often caused the engine to choke and cut out during take-off. Many crashed due to mishandling on take-off when a full fuel tank affected the centre of gravity.
(Quoted from here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sopwith_Camel )

About the parashute. I only want to point out, that the sim RoF is not easy (not to talk about ms flight), and that is what i like when flying (at that time)!
I got a revolver to shute with also when flying, but having some on my back shooting me to parts, then a parashute comes to mind.
 
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Reply #18 - Apr 12th, 2012 at 2:36pm

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andy190 wrote on Apr 11th, 2012 at 8:53pm:
Pilots of the RFC weren’t allowed to have Parachutes; the Top Brass thought it would induce cowardice.


Some idiots people with too much military power and zero field experience should learn to speak only after having gone a dozen mission themselves.

Really hate the kind of "top brass" like that.

And there's a reason for that personal hatred. I served, in my time, into the Army, and we DID have a lot of idiots people like those here, with too high a military grade and a too low a IQ, back then... and somehow I doubt the trend has changed any significantly ever since 1988. The kind of idiots people, to make myself clear, who think that the phrase "Lead, and I'll follow" can be uttered only while referring to a pub. Angry


andy190 wrote on Apr 11th, 2012 at 8:53pm:
German Fliers however were allowed Parachutes but many chose not to have them, not because they thought it was cowardly but because they were very heavy.


This I didn't know. Thought it was a very generalized idea of chivalry in air battles. That the <expletive deleted> at the top used to forbid it in some Air Forces while in others were allowed by forward thinking men, I had no idea. Undecided


Bass wrote on Apr 12th, 2012 at 7:59am:
Unlike the preceding Pup and Triplane, the Camel was not considered pleasant to fly. The Camel owed both its extreme manoeuvrability and its difficult handling characteristics to the placement of the engine, pilot, guns and fuel tank (some 90% of the weight of the craft) within the front seven feet of the aircraft, coupled with the strong gyroscopic effect of the rotary engine. The Camel soon gained an unfortunate reputation with student pilots. The Clerget engine was particularly sensitive to fuel mixture control, and incorrect settings often caused the engine to choke and cut out during take-off. Many crashed due to mishandling on take-off when a full fuel tank affected the centre of gravity.


Well, yes, the planes built around the engines had their own quirks, and the quirks of the engine only worsened the situation.

ALL the very aerobatic performance capable prop planes of today are NOT comparable to a Cessna 182, under the point of view od a calm and serene flight, and back then the delta between simple recreational planes and aerobatic and/or military fighter planes was even larger.


Bass wrote on Apr 12th, 2012 at 7:59am:
About the parashute. I only want to point out, that the sim RoF is not easy (not to talk about ms flight), and that is what i like when flying (at that time)!

I got a revolver to shute with also when flying, but having some on my back shooting me to parts, then a parashute comes to mind.


Would you care to reword the above quoted, please?

What I understood of the first part is that you believe RoF not to be easy, and here I can believe you, and M$ Flight to be EVEN MORE difficult... thing that leave me like this: Huh

The second part... you mean you have a Sopwith Camel with no armament, and only can shoot from a revolver? I thought the era of revolver and rifles on board to shoot to other planes ended WITH the introducing of the Sopwith Camel and its synchronized Vickers, on that front of the war, if not even before. Tongue
 

There is no such a thing as overkill. Only unworthy targets.
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Reply #19 - Apr 13th, 2012 at 7:47am

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Bass wrote on Apr 12th, 2012 at 7:59am:
About the parashute. I only want to point out, that the sim RoF is not easy (not to talk about ms flight), and that is what i like when flying (at that time)!

I got a revolver to shute with also when flying, but having some on my back shooting me to parts, then a parashute comes to mind.


Would you care to reword the above quoted, please?

What I understood of the first part is that you believe RoF not to be easy, and here I can believe you, and M$ Flight to be EVEN MORE difficult... thing that leave me like this: Huh

The second part... you mean you have a Sopwith Camel with no armament, and only can shoot from a revolver? I thought the era of revolver and rifles on board to shoot to other planes ended WITH the introducing of the Sopwith Camel and its synchronized Vickers, on that front of the war, if not even before. Tongue [/quote]




Misunstanding language here we go, ok.
I should have said "unlike ms flight", sorry!  Embarrassed

Ofcourse i have guns on the sw, going forward!! But that wont help me when my plane is being shooting to pieces from behind, will it? I only made a note, that i have a revolver i can use in the sim. If i succeded to shoot down the enemy with that revolver, while fighting for my life, i think a lot of heavy medals wont get me into the air next time i fly the camel.  Tongue Smiley

Ever tried the RoF or any other combat sim?
 
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Reply #20 - Apr 13th, 2012 at 11:37am

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Bass wrote on Apr 13th, 2012 at 7:47am:
Ofcourse i have guns on the sw, going forward!! But that wont help me when my plane is being shooting to pieces from behind, will it? I only made a note, that i have a revolver i can use in the sim. If i succeded to shoot down the enemy with that revolver, while fighting for my life, i think a lot of heavy medals wont get me into the air next time i fly the camel.  Tongue Smiley

Ever tried the RoF or any other combat sim?


Oh God... Shocked

Leaving humility in its scabbard for this time, I am among the most pluri-decorated aces of the various virtual campaigns in the Second Wordl War staged in the various CFS over simulated Europe and the Pacific both, and even piloted a Camel or three in Red Baron, never to the extent to make a name for myself though. My favorite plane remains the P-51D Mustang, followed closely by the P-47 Thunderbolt...

Let me ask you a question: Do YOU have any inkling of HOW a air combat is done?

A revolver to shoot behind you?

Manfred von Richthofen is twisting in his grave at this statement of yours. And with him a lot of his comrades and even his allies' foe pilots.

First rule: Never allow an enemy to get your Six 'o Clock. Or above you, for that.

Second rule: putting YOURSELF at your enemy's Six 'o Clock, and/or above him, is PARAMOUNT.

Third rule: should your enemy try to put himself at your Six 'o Clock or try to get the drop on you, you MUST not allow it and MUST at least try to retaliate trying to do exact same thing to him.

Fourth rule: train yourself in the fine art of the deflected shot. Bullets take a certain time to reach a target, and you must lead the other plane, when shooting from its side. If you shoot at its shape, the bullets will never reach their intended target. How much you must lead the other plane in such a situation depends on speed (yours, your enemy's and the one of the bullets), distance and winds. Make a good use of tracers, is the only valid suggestion I can give you here.

There are other rules, mind, but in a dogfight within the reality simulated by a computer, their usefulness is most of the times doubtful.

WHY do you think aerobatic combat maneuvers are made in the air between two fighting planes? To give an amusing airmanship show to the soldiers in the trenches, perhaps?

Of course, the rules of aerial combat changed a bit between the two wars, but I'm quite sure only someone BEGGING to be shot down, back in the first world war, would have tried to shoot behind his fighter plane with a revolver, of all things Roll Eyes

The problem with this approach to self defense of yours has two glaring weak spots:

First, and most important, revolvers are NOT machine guns. They are, as a rule, low powered when dealing with anti-material roles. Even today's Magnum series or the famed Desert Eagle .50 do not measure up with machine guns fire. They have about 50 meters of useful range and bad effectiveness against a plane, and back in those time there were no Magnum the like of today's, so cut the range off of at least 10 meters and dial WAY down any amount damage to any plane... THEN you must consider that your slow and almost spent bullets, if caught at the end of their range, almost assuredly were batted away from your enemy's propeller like an annoying fly, or stopped dead by the glass of your enemy's cockpit's wind deflector, or the metal of his rotating engine's casing, or even the rotating engine heads... you should have been SO LUCKY that a bullet from your revolver COULD have SLIGHTLY DENTED the radiator of a water cooled engine powered fighter, IF EVEN THAT.

All in all, unless you have the MASSIVE (here it would have been the ideal place for a slang expression in my language which meaning sadly would be lost in translation, so I'll refrain, writing instead...) STROKE OF LUCK that one of those slow and almost spent bullet would be able to cut one of your enemy wing tiers, thing that would amount to a miracle in and for itself, you're wasting your time, especially because of what is explained in the following paragraph.

Second, to shoot behind you, giving attention enough at what you do to avoid hitting your tail and trying to center a distant, almost assuredly out of range for a handgun enemy plane, you must leave the yoke unattended, giving your enemy MORE EASE at centering your six of clock and stuff your plane full of hot lead (if you're lucky) or, my favorites in those cases, incendiary rounds (if you are NOT lucky).

Forget the puny revolver in the holster. This not being a cowboys' shootout, it just doesn't measure up to the task. Full stop. Your BEST choice is to keep sharp situational awareness, and should an enemy try to take your Six, you MUST prevent that to happen at any cost and align your enemy with your machine guns' line of fire FIRST.

ALWAYS! Exclaim
« Last Edit: Apr 13th, 2012 at 3:24pm by Strategic Retreat »  

There is no such a thing as overkill. Only unworthy targets.
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Reply #21 - Apr 13th, 2012 at 5:05pm

andy190   Offline
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Quote:
Second rule: putting YOURSELF at your enemy's Six 'o Clock, and/or above him, is PARAMOUNT.


Not if it is a Two-seater, then you should try & get underneath it.

Fifth Rule: If it's a Two-seater always shoot the Gunner first. This was one of von Richthofen's main rules.

Sixth Rule: If an enemy is flying derictly at you DON'T turn away. This was a major rule in the RFC.


Quote:
First, and most important, revolvers are NOT machine guns. They are, as a rule, low powered when dealing with anti-material roles. Even today's Magnum series or the famed Desert Eagle .50 do not measure up with machine guns fire. They have about 50 meters of useful range and bad effectiveness against a plane, and back in those time there were no Magnum the like of today's, so cut the range off of at least 10 meters and dial WAY down any amount damage to any plane... THEN you must consider that your slow and almost spent bullets, if caught at the end of their range, almost assuredly were batted away from your enemy's propeller like an annoying fly, or stopped dead by the glass of your enemy's cockpit's wind deflector, or the metal of his rotating engine's casing, or even the rotating engine heads... you should have been SO LUCKY that a bullet from your revolver COULD have SLIGHTLY DENTED the radiator of a water cooled engine powered fighter, IF EVEN THAT.


The First air combat was fought with a Rifle & a Revolver. Wink
 

...

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Reply #22 - Apr 14th, 2012 at 9:45am

Bass   Offline
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Strategic Retreat wrote on Apr 13th, 2012 at 11:37am:
Bass wrote on Apr 13th, 2012 at 7:47am:
Ofcourse i have guns on the sw, going forward!! But that wont help me when my plane is being shooting to pieces from behind, will it? I only made a note, that i have a revolver i can use in the sim. If i succeded to shoot down the enemy with that revolver, while fighting for my life, i think a lot of heavy medals wont get me into the air next time i fly the camel.  Tongue Smiley

Ever tried the RoF or any other combat sim?


Oh God... Shocked

Leaving humility in its scabbard for this time, I am among the most pluri-decorated aces of the various virtual campaigns in the Second Wordl War staged in the various CFS over simulated Europe and the Pacific both, and even piloted a Camel or three in Red Baron, never to the extent to make a name for myself though. My favorite plane remains the P-51D Mustang, followed closely by the P-47 Thunderbolt...

Let me ask you a question: Do YOU have any inkling of HOW a air combat is done?

A revolver to shoot behind you?

Manfred von Richthofen is twisting in his grave at this statement of yours. And with him a lot of his comrades and even his allies' foe pilots.

First rule: Never allow an enemy to get your Six 'o Clock. Or above you, for that.

Second rule: putting YOURSELF at your enemy's Six 'o Clock, and/or above him, is PARAMOUNT.

Third rule: should your enemy try to put himself at your Six 'o Clock or try to get the drop on you, you MUST not allow it and MUST at least try to retaliate trying to do exact same thing to him.

Fourth rule: train yourself in the fine art of the deflected shot. Bullets take a certain time to reach a target, and you must lead the other plane, when shooting from its side. If you shoot at its shape, the bullets will never reach their intended target. How much you must lead the other plane in such a situation depends on speed (yours, your enemy's and the one of the bullets), distance and winds. Make a good use of tracers, is the only valid suggestion I can give you here.

There are other rules, mind, but in a dogfight within the reality simulated by a computer, their usefulness is most of the times doubtful.

WHY do you think aerobatic combat maneuvers are made in the air between two fighting planes? To give an amusing airmanship show to the soldiers in the trenches, perhaps?

Of course, the rules of aerial combat changed a bit between the two wars, but I'm quite sure only someone BEGGING to be shot down, back in the first world war, would have tried to shoot behind his fighter plane with a revolver, of all things Roll Eyes

The problem with this approach to self defense of yours has two glaring weak spots:

First, and most important, revolvers are NOT machine guns. They are, as a rule, low powered when dealing with anti-material roles. Even today's Magnum series or the famed Desert Eagle .50 do not measure up with machine guns fire. They have about 50 meters of useful range and bad effectiveness against a plane, and back in those time there were no Magnum the like of today's, so cut the range off of at least 10 meters and dial WAY down any amount damage to any plane... THEN you must consider that your slow and almost spent bullets, if caught at the end of their range, almost assuredly were batted away from your enemy's propeller like an annoying fly, or stopped dead by the glass of your enemy's cockpit's wind deflector, or the metal of his rotating engine's casing, or even the rotating engine heads... you should have been SO LUCKY that a bullet from your revolver COULD have SLIGHTLY DENTED the radiator of a water cooled engine powered fighter, IF EVEN THAT.

All in all, unless you have the MASSIVE (here it would have been the ideal place for a slang expression in my language which meaning sadly would be lost in translation, so I'll refrain, writing instead...) STROKE OF LUCK that one of those slow and almost spent bullet would be able to cut one of your enemy wing tiers, thing that would amount to a miracle in and for itself, you're wasting your time, especially because of what is explained in the following paragraph.

Second, to shoot behind you, giving attention enough at what you do to avoid hitting your tail and trying to center a distant, almost assuredly out of range for a handgun enemy plane, you must leave the yoke unattended, giving your enemy MORE EASE at centering your six of clock and stuff your plane full of hot lead (if you're lucky) or, my favorites in those cases, incendiary rounds (if you are NOT lucky).

Forget the puny revolver in the holster. This not being a cowboys' shootout, it just doesn't measure up to the task. Full stop. Your BEST choice is to keep sharp situational awareness, and should an enemy try to take your Six, you MUST prevent that to happen at any cost and align your enemy with your machine guns' line of fire FIRST.

ALWAYS! Exclaim


Holy macro. Thats a lesson to a "first timer" flying combat.  Roll Eyes

If you dont understand "first timer", then i must make a new rule:
Seventh Rule: Keep allways humor intact!  Wink
 
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Reply #23 - Apr 14th, 2012 at 9:46am

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andy190 wrote on Apr 13th, 2012 at 5:05pm:
Quote:
Second rule: putting YOURSELF at your enemy's Six 'o Clock, and/or above him, is PARAMOUNT.


Not if it is a Two-seater, then you should try & get underneath it.

Fifth Rule: If it's a Two-seater always shoot the Gunner first. This was one of von Richthofen's main rules.

Sixth Rule: If an enemy is flying derictly at you DON'T turn away. This was a major rule in the RFC.


At the moment at least, it seems no two-seaters are available under RoF, so it's a little redundant... maybe in anticipation of a future new AI plane... but for now... Tongue

That said, I somehow doubt that in the battle AI routines they implemented the possibility for a head-to-head slugfest so favored by the Japanese on the Pacific theater (and in fact... I seem to have never met a simulated Japanese under CFS who engaged me in that kind of air battle... but then... CFS is pretty old...). Undecided

What you wrote would be useful for real life air battles of the times, but for simulated air battles under the current limitation of hardware/software, they fall under the category: most of the times of doubtful usefulness. Wink


andy190 wrote on Apr 13th, 2012 at 5:05pm:
Quote:
First, and most important, revolvers are NOT machine guns. They are, as a rule, low powered when dealing with anti-material roles. Even today's Magnum series or the famed Desert Eagle .50 do not measure up with machine guns fire. They have about 50 meters of useful range and bad effectiveness against a plane, and back in those time there were no Magnum the like of today's, so cut the range off of at least 10 meters and dial WAY down any amount damage to any plane... THEN you must consider that your slow and almost spent bullets, if caught at the end of their range, almost assuredly were batted away from your enemy's propeller like an annoying fly, or stopped dead by the glass of your enemy's cockpit's wind deflector, or the metal of his rotating engine's casing, or even the rotating engine heads... you should have been SO LUCKY that a bullet from your revolver COULD have SLIGHTLY DENTED the radiator of a water cooled engine powered fighter, IF EVEN THAT.


The First air combat was fought with a Rifle & a Revolver. Wink


Yes, and there is NO report at all about damages done or received from the use of those weaponry from no side of the warring parts. It was simply a way to show defiance and belligerence to the enemy. Period.

Beside the doubtful experiments made in England with a plane with a pushing propeller (seen once in a documentary... they were insane those Brits), the French mounting their machine guns on the upper wing (good idea, but the gun jamming was a problem only partially resolved by mounting said gun on a rocker that allowed the pilot to better access it remaining seated) and the rather bizarre story about a French inventor mounting a steel deflector on the propeller to protect the propeller itself from the occasional bullet (no comment), until the arrival of Fokker's synchronizer (immediately copied from the allies after a German plane mounting it was recovered and reverse engineered) there was no way to shoot in front of the plane.

Before then, and as you mentioned, just the two seaters could boast machine gun fire, but only for the aft part of the plane and only for defense.

The attempts to shoot down an enemy plane made with revolvers (preferred on the semi-automatic guns the like of the Colt 1911 because the revolvers did not spit out spent ammo cases that could still contain remnants of burning powder... on a plane built out of wood and canvas) or even the much more adequate for range and power, but so much less so for speed of fire bolt action rifles (the M1 Garand and/or the Browning B.A.R. were all still way in the future) were certified failures at large (had they worked, there would have be no need at all to develop costly frontal machine gun fire). Tongue

The mass adoption of incendiary rounds in the last year or so of the WWI pretty much allowed to shoot down other canvas and wood made planes with a well placed burst, instead of staying there shooting and shooting hoping to get the pilot and/or a sensitive mechanical gizmo (engine electrical or other sensitive parts, fuel lines, wing and tail mobile parts tiers) that would make the plane descent beforetime. And I'm writing this because almost no simulator (or so called one) EVER made possible the use of this last kind of ammo, in their simulated first world war, that I know of. Lips Sealed
 

There is no such a thing as overkill. Only unworthy targets.
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Reply #24 - Apr 14th, 2012 at 9:52am

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"At the moment at least, it seems no two-seaters are available under RoF, so it's a little redundant... maybe in anticipation of a future new AI plane... but for now... Tongue"

You are so wrong! Why state something you dont know about?
 
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Reply #25 - Apr 14th, 2012 at 9:56am

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Bass wrote on Apr 14th, 2012 at 9:52am:
"At the moment at least, it seems no two-seaters are available under RoF, so it's a little redundant... maybe in anticipation of a future new AI plane... but for now... Tongue"

You are so wrong! Why state something you dont know about?


Don't take it as a personal affront. Had not see any. You say there is? Then I apologize and suggest you to beware to the back fire of those, following the fifth rule quoted by Andy. Roll Eyes
 

There is no such a thing as overkill. Only unworthy targets.
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Reply #26 - Apr 14th, 2012 at 10:14am

Bass   Offline
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I dont take anything personal, maybe i would, if i got a affront attack.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rise_of_Flight:_The_First_Great_Air_War
 
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Reply #27 - Apr 14th, 2012 at 5:06pm

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Bass wrote on Apr 14th, 2012 at 9:45am:
Holy macro. Thats a lesson to a "first timer" flying combat.  Roll Eyes

If you don't understand "first timer", then i must make a new rule:
Seventh Rule: Keep always humor intact!  Wink


Just trying to be useful, here. Just think at how lucky we are that WHEN (not if) we're shot down are able to press a key and retry (in reality it NEVER worked like that). But between trying and retrying, it's not so bad an idea redoing the bit we failed to be a bit better than before, maybe following the suggestions of those who are a little more advanced, especially if we are beginners. Wink


Bass wrote on Apr 14th, 2012 at 10:14am:
I don't take anything personal, maybe i would, if i got a affront attack.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rise_of_Flight:_The_First_Great_Air_War


All the previous discussions aside, my perplexities remain. As much can be gleaned, this RoF remains a pure WWI simulator. Undecided

Now, I am willing to concede it may be well done... but taking the place of something so massively versatile like FS, that allows you to span from the Wright Flier to the B2 and beyond... Huh

Don't think so. If a successor to FS must be found, it's not here. Lips Sealed
 

There is no such a thing as overkill. Only unworthy targets.
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Reply #28 - Apr 14th, 2012 at 5:40pm

andy190   Offline
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Quote:
Beside the doubtful experiments made in England with a plane with a pushing propeller (seen once in a documentary... they were insane those Brits)


Are you calling the Airco D.H.1 & D.H.2 "doubtful experiments"?

In 1915 they were some of the planes that ended the Fokker Scourge.
 

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Reply #29 - Apr 14th, 2012 at 6:09pm

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andy190 wrote on Apr 14th, 2012 at 5:40pm:
Quote:
Beside the doubtful experiments made in England with a plane with a pushing propeller (seen once in a documentary... they were insane those Brits)


Are you calling the Airco D.H.1 & D.H.2 "doubtful experiments"?

In 1915 they were some of the planes that ended the Fokker Scourge.


Sweet God in heaven, what have you gone and recovered... the documentary I spoke about only showed what now I recognize ad the DH1 and ever since I've never found anything about it... interesting... Cheesy

Anyway, I did not call them "useless", did I? But doubtful they do remain, though, since NO actual fighter plane has ever come out of that engine and propeller disposition. Wink

...that I know of, at least... Huh
 

There is no such a thing as overkill. Only unworthy targets.
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