A question about "combat flaps"
Posted: Sat Sep 10, 2005 10:31 pm
I keep seeing a reference to "combat flaps" on this board, and a few statements like "I flew the profile with 50% fuel and combat flaps like the real Thunderbirds".
Hmm...
I'm not trying to act like a know-it-all here, but... In 15 years of crewing, fixing, running, and inspecting every block of F-16 the USAF ever bought, I can tell you that as far as I know there is zero such animal. I even pulled my copies of the -00GV and 00GS manuals off the shelves and perused them. LEF's and flaperon positions are purely a function of the FLCS, which uses data such as airspeed, AOA, air data, gear position, throttle PLA, ambient temp, stores config, etc., to schedule the flight controls. The only control I know of is the ALT FLAP EXTEND, which is a system used during a failure of certain modes of the FLCS. In other words, the FLCS does it all and the pilot has no control over flap position.
Now, having said all of this, I'm assuming that because you're using a modded and skinned version of the F-15C flight model in the LOMAC software, you are using a revamped version of the 15 Charlie flight engine. This is why you are using the combat flaps, because the -16 flight model and it's number-crunching doesn't truly emulate the real -16?
Now, this is not being posted to "stir the pot", so to speak. I really would like to see the answer. I've watched the videos about 20 times, and in doing so, have examined the animation of the control surfaces during maneuvers. (The flying is very good, by the way. Better than I can do right now without practice!) The deflection of the horizontal stabs is way out of whack, as in really excessive. some of this may be because of using an internet connection and the responses lagging behind the inputs, I'm guessing.
If I had the time to work on the skin. I'd like to get rid of all of the underwing pylons as well. T-birds never fly with them.
This is not to anger anyone. I really am curious as to what's going on with the flight engine. I think that the flying is great and what you guys are doing is great, enough so that eventually I'd like to be a part of it.
Cheers!
Kev
Hmm...
I'm not trying to act like a know-it-all here, but... In 15 years of crewing, fixing, running, and inspecting every block of F-16 the USAF ever bought, I can tell you that as far as I know there is zero such animal. I even pulled my copies of the -00GV and 00GS manuals off the shelves and perused them. LEF's and flaperon positions are purely a function of the FLCS, which uses data such as airspeed, AOA, air data, gear position, throttle PLA, ambient temp, stores config, etc., to schedule the flight controls. The only control I know of is the ALT FLAP EXTEND, which is a system used during a failure of certain modes of the FLCS. In other words, the FLCS does it all and the pilot has no control over flap position.
Now, having said all of this, I'm assuming that because you're using a modded and skinned version of the F-15C flight model in the LOMAC software, you are using a revamped version of the 15 Charlie flight engine. This is why you are using the combat flaps, because the -16 flight model and it's number-crunching doesn't truly emulate the real -16?
Now, this is not being posted to "stir the pot", so to speak. I really would like to see the answer. I've watched the videos about 20 times, and in doing so, have examined the animation of the control surfaces during maneuvers. (The flying is very good, by the way. Better than I can do right now without practice!) The deflection of the horizontal stabs is way out of whack, as in really excessive. some of this may be because of using an internet connection and the responses lagging behind the inputs, I'm guessing.
If I had the time to work on the skin. I'd like to get rid of all of the underwing pylons as well. T-birds never fly with them.
This is not to anger anyone. I really am curious as to what's going on with the flight engine. I think that the flying is great and what you guys are doing is great, enough so that eventually I'd like to be a part of it.
Cheers!
Kev