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Well it sure isn't the hurricane in il-2 in hyperlobby I get my butt handed to me every time I go up in it.
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I think the Hurricane is just fine but I'll take a Bf-109G or K over it any day. Or a P-40...or a Spitfire....or an F4F, F6F, F4U, P-51, etc... It isn't my favorite plane...but if I had to use it i'd be okay with it. |
IL-2 Sturmovick though a very fun game/sim does accurately simulate how many of the aircraft it depicts actually flew making it a very poor way to judge what aircraft was better than the other.
For starters the way they have the BF109s set up is wrong they did have good acceleration but nothing near what they have in IL-2.IL-2 makes the Wildcat seem half way decent when it fact it was no match for any Japanese aircraft it faced.What made the Wildcat good was purely its durability and the tactical skill that its pilots employed.I could go on and on but I wont.The in game AI can do things that are not even possible to do if you are flying the same plane in the sim and things that would be impossible in a real aircraft. To base judgement on real aircraft based on how they fly in any sim especially IL-2 sounds very amateur to put it nicely.Thanks to Il2 there are tons of people who do not know hat they are talking about that think that the BF109 was the best aircraft in WWII.If IL-2 where truly accurate you would die half the time just taking of and landing in BF109 almost as many where lost in landing and take off accidents as where to enemy action.Most other famous fighters had nasty vices the P-51 for example could bite you if you banked it certain ways it had to do with the tail surfaces and they never solved the problem you just had to avoid certain maneuvers. The truth is that the BF109 was a fairly good design but it was hard for a pilot to get the best from it which is always a weakness the Spitfire on the other hand even a relatively inexperienced pilot could get the max performance out of a Spitfire safely and that goes a log way.I saw a TV show once where a former German ace sat in a Spitfire he was very impressed and wished that he had a Spitfire over a BF109 based on what he saw of them in combat and on what he felt from the seat. If I was going to pick one best air to air combat aircraft from WWII it would be the Spitfire easily because it was a very easy aircraft to fly(in real life) and it took little skill for a lay pilot to fly one effectively that factor is very important because the easier it is for a pilot to fly his mount the more effective he will be in combat. |
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Back when I was in middle and high school I was really into building models mostly 1:48 and 1:72 scale WWII aircraft.I used to save up my money and go to the hobby shop and sit sometimes for over an hour deciding what plane to choose. One time they had a P-61 kit that I had not noticed before and I ended up picking that one it was one of my favorite builds mostly because it was different.I also read up on the P-61 and found that it was pretty impressive for its size.P-61 did shoot down many single engine fighters a common prey for the Black Widow in Europe where the specialized FW190A/F8's used to attack airfields and other military targets in the early evening and pre dawn hours. |
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Which is why I explained it in two different posts if you understand the reasoning it is not confusing.And as August military nomenclature can be confusing for example M1 can be four different things August only mentioned two of them.the other two are M1 Carbine and M1 Thompson. If you dont know the context of the conversation when I say M60 am I talking about the machine gun or the tank? It was not you who did not know that the B-26 and A-26 where two different aircraft it was another poster mako88sb.He thanked Steve for explaining that there are two aircraft using "B-26" don't take offense where none was intended. |
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In my opinion there was no "best" fighter in WW2, at least among the group of very best. The Spitfire was tight-turning, the Bf-109 was fast climbing and fast-rolling, the Mustang had extremely long range, the P-47 was amazingly rugged, and they all did their respective jobs superlatively. I would love to be able to fly any of them. And I didn't even mention the Japanese or the US Navy fighters. Silly me. |
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Yeah, I don't think I knew anything about the P-61 until I seen the old 1/48 scale Monogram kit with the Shepard Paine diorama insert. I wonder how many aircraft & armor kits he helped sell for them? Pretty impressive work considering there was hardly any aftermarket stuff available back then. http://sheperdpaine.com/gallery/aircraft/P-61_1.JPG |
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The most important factor I argue is pilot and overall unit skill an air force that has generally better pilots will always have an advantage so long as they can maintain it something that both Germany and Japan failed to do while the Allies managed to have fairly skilled pilot corps that where consistent throughout most of the war. As the war progressed Japanese and German pilots on average become of sub par quality and the survivors even with all their skill could not make up the difference.At the start of hostilities Germany and Japan had very skilled pilots which is the primary reason that in the first year or so of the war they where dominating air combat.Of you still had insanely good pilots a late war Japanese ace managed to shot down 5 F6F Hellcats in a single engagement 1945 most likely this was purely do to one pilot having vastly superior skills of course it had no effect on the outcome of the war for Japan.Another example of pure skill is Richard Bong he managed to defeat an experienced pilot flying a P-38 while himself flying a T-6 trainer this was while Bong was still in advanced training. The Axis powers also rarely rotated pilots so they fought on until they died or the war was over.The Allies on the other hand understood the value of having combat experienced pilots train new pilots and many pilots rotated back to the states and passed their knowledge on to new pilots. |
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I would say that your belief about the primary advantage that the US had during WWII is pretty much fact.Now the Axis could have countered this early in the war which the Japanese in particular set out to do of course they failed to do maintain the advantage that they initially gained now had the Axis been able to mount some sort a sizable dual front action against the US that would have been interesting.Just as the capture of Moscow in 1941 by the Germans most likely would have dealt a crushing blow to the USSR.Of the topic of strategy during WWII is another can of worms. EDIT: Well a quick look int the back of a book about late mark Spitfires(VII-IX) has an index that includes a 1942 evaluation of a IX Spit vs. a captured FW190A.It goes into much detail but basically says that IX Spit can out turn a 190 and that climb is about equal though at higher levels the Spit is superior under all conditions the 190 had better acceleration.It does state that it was felt that the 190 was able to well evade a Spit when the Spit tried to get onto the 190's tail in this case the 190 could easily flick roll and evade especially in a negative G turn where the Spit could not follow.This disproves the data i read on the net claiming the 190 had better sustained turn abilities this can not be possible when the Spit had better turning and better climbing rates. The XIV Spit was found to superior to a FW190A is most all respects except rolling this test was done in 1944 a few months before the 190D9 came into service the RAF took an educated guess on its performance they thought it was going to have a DB603(the Dora actually had a more powerful Jumo213A).I can post both evaluations in their entirety if anyone is interested. |
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What's with the rough 'F' coding? |
Yes the merit of fw190 was its toll rate and heavy armament.
While reasonable turning ability was important in some situation most kills had been made on opportunity targets or zoom fights with unsuspecting enemy. It seldom came to duels most victims did not see what hit them. |
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