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Bullethead

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Everything posted by Bullethead

  1. OT Dunno whether to laugh or cry!

    That driver was very lucky. He could easily have been overcome by fumes before being rescued, or the whole place could have caught fire from the forklift motor. There was a commercial a while back here for some aid to small businesses that featured such an accident at a winery. All that survived were the few cases in the show/tasting room. But the folks at the winery were happy about the "disaster", because it enabled them to jack the price way up on their remaining stock due to it suddenly being very rare
  2. DH5

    Yup. I"ve noticed several squadrons that go from DH2 to DH5 to SE5, but right now there's the gap in the middle.
  3. Amazing how Ozzie Osbourne has had a TV show and done commercials for many companies including Blizzard, but nobody mentions he did the same thing. 20-odd years ago, he pissed on the Alamo, which is a very sacred war memorial to all Texans. He also claimed he was drunk out of his mind, but even drunk Texans would never do that. So AFAIK, he hasn't been back to Texas due to the price on his head that's still in force there.
  4. Nieuport N.24 Bis Lewis

    Call me drunk, weird, or whatever, but prefer the Fee :).
  5. Railyards fixed?

    AFAIK, the reoriented railyards are in the add-on and not out yet.
  6. DH5

    Yeah, some DH5 screenies would be nice
  7. Looks nice :). Now, about that pilot figure you promised me.....
  8. As things are in the game, I have to agree with Hasse Wind. What breaks wings in OFF is excessive Gs, not excessive speed. Now, I grant you that in real life, excessive speed could twist off single-spar sesquiplane lower wings, or so the word as come down to us. As I hear it, very high speeds would cause sesquiplane lower wings to rotate about their single spar until the leading edge twisted up enough to tear off. Hence the Alb D.Va's little strut from the main V-struts down toward the leading edge. However, in OFF, most planes can't go fast enough, even in a full-power 0-G dive, to reach this point. Too much "built-in headwind". It's been a while since I've flown Nupes, but IIRC they can't go more than about 130-140 knots no matter how hard you try. Considering that their max level speed is about 100-110 knots, this shouldn't break them even if their wings twisted. HOWEVER, if you yank the stick while going this fast in a Nupe, you will break it. So, how fast can you go in an Alb D.II? If you can't reach 200 knots, you're not going to dive away from a Nupe very easily.
  9. Nieuport N.24 Bis Lewis

    You need to fly Nupes so you can learn where they break under human control, and thus know how fast you need to dive to escape them
  10. Why Castor Oil?

    But here's the thing..... Even the rather primitive petroleum-based oils of the WW1 era (and indeed up to about 1930, according to the papers of lubricant engineers that I've recently read in pursuit of this answer) worked fine in stationary engines. Now, "worked fine" is a relative term, so I'm talking about pre-1930 standards here. These oils were total crap by today's standards. You could run the engine hard (but still mostly within its operational parameters) every day, but you'd have to overhaul it at the end of the year. New piston rings, new liners perhaps, maybe new crank- or camshaft bearings. IOW, the sort of things you only have to replace these days after 200,000 miles or so, assuming you can still get parts. Back then, however, motor companies built the same engine for decades so this wasn't a problem. With castor oil, OTOH, if your motor diidn't have a total loss oil system, you had to tear it down and remove the gunk and varnish after every few hours if you wanted to maintain peak performance. This is why castor oil was associated with racing back in the day, because they tore down their engines after every race anyway. If you only run the motor on weekends, you can afford the downtime on weekdays. So essentially, the racers used a total loss oil system, only the total loss was manual and happened as a result of disassembly after a run. As a result, they could use the enhanced lubricating properties of castor oil in their very hard running during races without suffering (much) from the gunking effects. This is why I favor the "immissibility theory" over "better lubrican theory". If castor oil was the only thing that worked well enough for high-performance combat engines, then every airplane would have used castor oil. OTOH, if rotaries could have used anything else and not blown up too frequently, then rotaries would have used petroleum-based oils and the Austrians would have used them. I noted in one of the erudite articles I read on this subject that the US planted massive fields of castor beans in WW1, despite the supposedly successful test of various petroleum-based oils in rotaries. Damn, I haven't talked to Bletch in years. I hope he does show up here.
  11. OT (WW2) The Great Escape

    C'est la guerre, and c'est la apres-guerre. That's not an atrocity, it's necessity. In many cases guys are killed trying to surrender, or shot after being captured, due a host of situational factors. Everybody who's been on the firing line knows this, and I'd say the vast majority of vets have been involved in such situations. But very few folks talk about it afterwards, because most don't want to think about it again and all know they can go to jail for it even years after. Because vets don't say much about it, everybody else thinks it's an uncommon atrocity. Nobody likes taking prisoners. First, if the bastards don't give up at the get-go, usually they've taken out some of your buddies before they give up, which greatly increases their chance of being shot when they leave cover. Second, as you say, there's the logistical problem of dealing with them, even if they're healthy. Third, you usually can't leave them unsupervised in your rear. And fourth, those who've dealt with prisoners before usually don't want to do it again, unless they just like shooting them (and every unit has at least one of those). So, to anybody who might be on the firing line in the future, my advice is never report that you have prisoners up the chain of command, EVER. The first your boss should know about it is when you walk into his CP with the prisoner in tow. Up until that point, as far as he is concerned, you don't have any prisoners, so if you have to cap them somewhere along the way, no harm no foul. But if you say you've got some and then can't deliver, it's your ass.
  12. First Campaign

    Yup, the wind makes you use different amounts of rudder all the time. On any given mission, the wind will be from a different direction at a different strength than it was last time, and during the mission it's likely to change both direction and strength at least once. Plus, you change directions all the time. Thus, you might be all trimmed out while heading for a waypoint, but once you turn there you'll have to do something with the rudder to account for the different direction you now are to the wind.
  13. Couple of questions... 1. How fast were you going while the Nupes were still able to keep up with you? 2. How far did you try to extend away before reversing back at them? Just a brief dive (a few hundred feet of altitude, a few hundred yards of horizontal distance), when starting from the lower end of what you consider your fighting speed range (say 60-70 knots), is only going to put you in the upper end of your fighting speed range (say 100-110 knots). It will do the same for any Nupes following you, and they can handle that much speed no problem. The whole "dive away and come back" thing isn't a dogfighting move, it's hitting the reset button. You end the fight your're in now and start a rematch at a later time (as in 5-10 minutes later) once you've got your E back. You have to dive away enough to disengage from the fight. You have to reach a speed considerably higher than the enemy can reach, or go rather lower than he wants to go, before you can open up enough distance to zoom back up or turn around safely.
  14. OT (WW2) The Great Escape

    I think it was closer to 80% than 70%. Whatever, the WW2 U-boats definitely had by far the highest casualty (and highest KIA/MIA to WIA) ratios of any service that wasn't deliberately suicidal. Probably, when you consider all the folks in the kamikaze corps who never flew due to the A-bombs, the U-boat men had it even worse than official suicide units. The Soviet penal battalions seem to have come close, but I don't think they surpassed either the U-boats or the kamikazes. I think they should sell a combo pack of Das Boot and The Cruel Sea. Both sides of the coin, both sides in Hell. Yup, Band of Brothers is also good and realistic. I just don't put it on my list because I don't like the focus on "elite" units, to the extent that they were the only guys who had that sort of esprit de corps or faced such horrific situations. Not to disparage the achievements of the airborne troops, mind you, but I'd rather be dumped behind the lines with just light weapons and mucho disorganization than conduct a frontal assault through hedgerows or in the Huertgen Forest, or fight at Stalingrad or Okinawa on either side.
  15. Phase Four

    Welcome aboard Av8er! New guy buys the drinks . There's no moeny EVER wasted on OBD products. All the OBD guys work day jobs and only make WW1 flightsim goodness in their spare time. That's a nice way of saying that the more money we throw at them, the more stuff we'll get in the future. Few sales = end of development. But note that despite this, OBD has given away a huge amount of stuff since BHaH came out early this year. Sure, it had problems that they've fixed, but most "patches" have actually added new features and content, especially the 1.32 superpatch. I'd have paid for all the stuff in that one. So, consider your investment in OBD products safe. No matter when you plunk down your money, you'll end up with a lot more than you paid for over time.
  16. OT (WW2) The Great Escape

    My favorite war movies cut through the subsequent propaganda and false heroics to show things pretty much like they really were. Naturally, my list is short, and it includes a few things that might surprise you all.... #1: Ride with the Devil. Only a non-US stuido could have made this one. #2. The Cruel Sea #3. Saving Private Ryan. YES, I know it was just King Arthur's grail legend set in WW2, but all the details were spot-on, from the protagonists being sent and getting killed doing a silly-ass mission ordered by some paper-pusher back in the States right down to the way all the guys had the skin peeled off the backs of their hands assymetrically, which is diagnostic of hitting the deck while holding a rifle. You rate combat pay just for seeing that movie. It gave me flashbacks the whole time and for a while after. When I saw it the 1st time in the theater, not 1 swinging Richard got up until after the credits were long over. #4. Das Boot. From what I gather, that was pretty much how it was. You can quibble about the ending, but wars ARE tragedies, so having the classic ending of a tragic play, with all the characters piled up dead on the stage, is quite fitting. Besides, it's Germanic, and all Germanic heroes are supposed to die at the end of their sagas. How else do they get to Valhalla? You didn't see Beowulf living to a ripe old age, did you? I like a bunch of other war movies, but they either burden the real history with the love interests or whatever of their fictional main characters, or are just pure hogwash (but still good entertainment). This is a long list, however, so I'll not type it.
  17. Oops!

    There's no such thing as a premature ej--Oh sorry, wrong forum
  18. My condolences . As they taught me long ago, "be courteous to all but have a plan to kill everybody you meet." So for years I've gone through life with imaginary Terminator-style targetting reticules dancing across my retinas, tracking everybody and looking for stuff I can use as weapons if need be. OFF didn't do that to me, but it helps maintain the habit
  19. OT (WW2) The Great Escape

    Hehehe, that recent abortion is a movie I love to hate. If I'd been directing it, it would have been all the same (out of Hollywood necessity) until the very end, when it would have had an ending like Das Boot. I know it's painful to do, but please try to recall how this dog of a movie ended. The shot-up B-17 staggers in and lands back home. 100-octane aviation gasoline is pouring from innumerable flak and bullet holes, "self-sealing" be damned. And every crewman still able to stand, plus a platoon or 2 of ground personnel, all huddle up in or adjacent to this inflammable cascade and all its surrounding fumes, and LIGHT UP SMOKES! And thus, the Das Boot ending . As the credits roll as an overlay atop the carnage, a few flame-enveloped figures stagger out of the huge fireball, run around for a bit, then fall, twitch a bit, and go still. And guess what? This would have been just as true to history as the rest of the movie. Shame they didn't do it that way
  20. Best book on the air war in WWI?

    Thanks. I didn't know about this . Lou needs to put that "winter reading list of his" in that thread, too.
  21. OFF Addon #1 will contain.....

    HAHAHA!!!! I get to beat Widowmaker to the Python snippet Sabash and huzzah for me!!!
  22. Best book on the air war in WWI?

    Hehehe, they didn't call it the Great War for nothing. Even such a relatively small aspect of it as aviation requires a library to get a handle on. All you can get out of a single-volume treatment is the bibliography, which you use to get the the bibliographies of the books it cites, which themselves are still within 2 or 3 removes from what will really tell you something useful. So I suggest you search this forum for previous threads on books (which IMHO need to be compiled and stickied in a recommended reading list). There are way too many good ones to list them all.
  23. Nieuport N.24

    Hmmmm. Any chance of talking you call into a "N.24 (early)" ?
  24. Nieuport N.24

    OK, I'll take your word for it. But there's still the question of whether the N24/27 will have 2 flight models, one with crappy ailerons and 1 with good ailerons?
  25. Nieuport N.24

    OK, so the N24 entered production in early 1917, so that by May 1917 it was the only Nupe fighter being built. Seemingly it was not well-received due to problems with the aileron control caused by the strips, but by late-Aug to early-Sep 1917, they had figured this out and a cure was in hand. Thus, it appears there was a period of at least several months in there when N24s had bad aileron response. Will that be reflected in the campaign? Also, to confuse the issue, it appears that the N27 didn't come out until 1918. This was identical in game terms to the N24, the only difference apparently being modified landing gear. However, the N27 seems to have come with the strips installed, even though the problem had been noted months before. So, assuming the N27 shows up in the game, would it also revert to crappy roll response or would you assume that field units immediately cut the strips off upon receipt? Or did it just take well in to 1918 for all field units to hear of the solution to the problem and take a knife to the strips?
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