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Advanced tactis were many, including use of radar situation information (yes, Soviets used radars!), high crusing speed (resulting in much reduced engine lifetime), constant climbing and shallow diving while cruising (up to compressibility point).QUOTE]
In general, there were many pilots practices that resulted in reduced engine lifetime, none so much as getting shot down, though.
13 March, 1943I found reference to this at several locations, this citation is not completely accurate as several squadrons make up a fighter group.
The 91st, 92nd and 93rd FS made up the 81st FG. Rather than identifying the actual squadrons, many authors list the whole group as the participant when if fact it may be one squadron (and it probably was).
I found reference where in March 1943 7 out of 12 "81st FG" P-39s were shot down, possibly by JG 77 Me 109s. The P-39s were being escorted by RAF Spitfires (Fighters over Tunisia)
81st Fighter Group, 350th Fighter Group and two squadrons of the 68th Observation Group in North Africa, coming into action by the end of 1942. All of these units struggled to find a full complement of aircraft during the fighting in North Africa, and also struggled against the Luftwaffe. During the fighting in North Africa and Italy the USAAF lost 107 P-39s, most of them lost to ground fire while undertaking ground attack missions. In return the P-39 pilots scored twenty confirmed aerial victories and destroyed a similar number of aircraft on the ground, but their main role by now was no longer as a air superiority fighter. The final aerial victory for a USAAF P-39 probably came on 6 April 1944.
Bell P-39 Airacobra in American Service
I've pulled too many aircraft off the runway with a collapsed nosewheel after this sort of landing to accept that it is a good way of landing, regardless of experience level.So, you'd rather have seen him, for his VERY FIRST TIME IN AN AIRCRAFT, be a lawn dart and crash? If you've ever seen someone come in tail heavy on a trike, bounce the tail off the ground, slam the nose gear in so it collapsed, then flip the aircraft, you might be a LITTLE less "know it all" about it. He came in straight and level for his first time flying, EVER. Could you guys have done so well, your first time in an aircraft? I think not. By the way, he didn't flare and land the aircraft. If you had watched the video, you would see the PROFESSIONAL PILOT actually did the flare and touchdown. YOU'RE BUSTED!
-Irish
My girlfriend watched her favorite airplane in the world, the one she took her Private Pilot checkride in, a Beech Sundowner, make a solid, level attitude three-point landing, then crow-hop off the runway to wind up in a heap in the grass. This due to the ham-fisted efforts of a newly retired full bird Colonel B-52 driver with 10K hours in heavy iron.I've pulled too many aircraft off the runway with a collapsed nosewheel after this sort of landing to accept that it is a good way of landing, regardless of experience level.
A number of my students over the years have done BETTER than that on their very first flight, making their very first landing entirely unassisted on the controls, albeit with some verbal coaching. And as for the instructor "doing the flare and landing", it wasn't quite like that. Been there, done that. Thousands of times. I can tell when the instructor "took over"; more like "helped out". That happened just before touchdown after the student had set up the flare but wasn't bringing the nose up far enough to curtail the rate of descent. The instructor applied just enough back pressure to prevent a nose plant. This student obviously wasn't yet comfortable with the ailerons; witness the wing rocking going on right down practically to touchdown. That instructor's got bigger cajones than I. I wouldn't get into landing until my student had gotten over that wing-rocking nervousness, 15 or 20 minutes at most.Could you guys have done so well, your first time in an aircraft? I think not. By the way, he didn't flare and land the aircraft. If you had watched the video, you would see the PROFESSIONAL PILOT actually did the flare and touch
Absolutely. Add to that the US radar would not be in theater until August '42. Just two squadrons of P-39s initially. No plane on earth at that time could intercept bombers between 18-22000' from the ground. They had to have early warning but since there was no radar yet they had to fly patrols and only a couple of planes could be spared at any one time. First contact was 4/30/42 followed by multiple raids daily. With adequate warning the P-39s could (and did) get up to 23000' to intercept the bombers, but they were still outnumbered and very green. They did pretty well considering.I wonder if people are ignoring a possible explanation for the poor repute of the P-39 in the Pacific: the Japanese combination of pilots and aircraft was better than the Luftwaffe.
I would say that computer flight sims have changed a bit in the 25 years since Secret Weapons of the Luftwaffe was released.I have played a bit with flight simulators and had a lot of fun with Secret Weapons of the Luftwaffe. And I can tell you there is NO connection between flying computer games and the real thing.
Unless they changed enough to provide full movement, simulated pilot g loading and no synthetic latency, they are still nothing but toys.I would say that computer flight sims have changed a bit in the 25 years since Secret Weapons of the Luftwaffe was released.
I would never suggest it is a potential replacement for actual training. However, to suggest they can play ZERO role is flight training is also incorrect. When I was doing my private license training 20 years ago, my flight school had a few open desktops with whatever the latest Microsoft Flight Simulator installed. We were encouraged to play around with the program, and specifically work on our VOR skills.
I wonder if people are ignoring a possible explanation for the poor repute of the P-39 in the Pacific: the Japanese combination of pilots and aircraft was better than the Luftwaffe.
Absolutely. Add to that the US radar would not be in theater until August '42. Just two squadrons of P-39s initially. No plane on earth at that time could intercept bombers between 18-22000' from the ground. They had to have early warning but since there was no radar yet they had to fly patrols and only a couple of planes could be spared at any one time. First contact was 4/30/42 followed by multiple raids daily. With adequate warning the P-39s could (and did) get up to 23000' to intercept the bombers, but they were still outnumbered and very green. They did pretty well considering.
Unless they changed enough to provide full movement, simulated pilot g loading and no synthetic latency, they are still nothing but toys.
And I've used them for my instrument rating and when working on y CFII and they were great for precision flying "by the numbers" but to believe that you're going to determine how a high performance aircraft is going to perform during simulated combat conditions is ridiculous.I would never suggest it is a potential replacement for actual training. However, to suggest they can play ZERO role is flight training is also incorrect. When I was doing my private license training 20 years ago, my flight school had a few open desktops with whatever the latest Microsoft Flight Simulator installed. We were encouraged to play around with the program, and specifically work on our VOR skills.
My girlfriend, who's had one initial and three recurrent training sequences in those (737-800) at American, says you'll never mistake it for real flight, but it'll still make you sweat. She says it's faithful to reality except in situations where complicated transitions and interactions are happening together, such as flare to landing. Then the computer gets a little bit overloaded with all the motion calculations and lags slightly behind the pace of events, such that the same flare technique that gets you a greaser in the plane will give you a thump in the sim. And if you master greasers in the sim, be ready for a rude shock in the plane.Speaking of full motion flight sims though, I have one hour booked in a 737-800 full motion sim with flight instructor this weekend.