Mainstay Posted December 19, 2014 Posted December 19, 2014 Kinda sad to read it was Fuel that made some of these machines never fly....
snapsimo Posted December 25, 2014 Posted December 25, 2014 When I get airborne in the 109, sometimes the engine seizes. Prop stop dead. About 2 minutes into the flight. Using auto start as well. Don't know what I'm doing wrong.
Buzzles Posted December 25, 2014 Posted December 25, 2014 When I get airborne in the 109, sometimes the engine seizes. Prop stop dead. About 2 minutes into the flight. Using auto start as well. Don't know what I'm doing wrong. Is the governer in auto mode? Fancy trying Star Citizen? Click here!
snapsimo Posted December 25, 2014 Posted December 25, 2014 As far as I know. The clocks moving so I think so.
Solty Posted December 27, 2014 Posted December 27, 2014 (edited) Guys because sound topic was closed I wanted to say that I like the 109s sound now after patches. It is at a level with P-51 and Dora and you can hear some detail in it. Especially in the external. Internal may be muffed, but thats because of the helmet. Before those few patches the 109 was very quiet and had just some zzzzzzzz sound. Now the low brbrbrbrr of the engine at low rpm is realy nicely modeled. Surely an improvment over the one that we had before. It has changed for better surely for me.The whine can be heard although it is quite quiet, but it was never at a level of P-51 so and it is quiet too so I believe that scale is quite well preserved. Some still need work for me though. Like the high RPM one, but it seems as the normal thing that happens in DCS sounds. They always have that "too clean" factor. You can find samples in effects/aircrafts/engines/DB605 Edited December 27, 2014 by Solty [sIGPIC][/sIGPIC]In 21st century there is only war and ponies. My experience: Jane's attack squadron, IL2 for couple of years, War Thunder and DCS. My channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCyAXX9rAX_Sqdc0IKJuv6dA
venancio.avf Posted December 29, 2014 Posted December 29, 2014 (edited) hey, just bought this beauty and I would like to know why my fuel pressure gauge drops when i'm flying iverted, shouldn't this plane fly without no problem inverted?? I really don't know, my only virtual flight experience comes from war thunder, so i want to know if it's normal or I'm just forgetting something, thx in advance, sorry for bad english. edit: just checked the manual, iverted flight limited to 10 secs due to loss of oil pressure and failure of the scavenger pump to operate iverted. Edited December 29, 2014 by venancio.avf
audax Posted December 29, 2014 Posted December 29, 2014 Is the governer in auto mode? I had the problem that my generator went off and the auto prop didn't work anymore. I fixed the problem by removing all bindings for the circuit breakers…
venancio.avf Posted December 30, 2014 Posted December 30, 2014 I notice something wierd, "Zu" in the fuel pumps lever position means closed, while in the radiator control "Zu" means that they are open, should it be closed as well?
TXSailor Posted December 31, 2014 Posted December 31, 2014 I notice something wierd, "Zu" in the fuel pumps lever position means closed, while in the radiator control "Zu" means that they are open, should it be closed as well? Zu is always closed. Auf is open for the radiator as well.
venancio.avf Posted December 31, 2014 Posted December 31, 2014 Zu is always closed. Auf is open for the radiator as well. ok, so when I go to instant action>cold start my binding for open put me on Zu position, and the hints that pop up when you put the mouse over Zu says that it's open while in reality they are closed, don't know if it is a bug, I think I will just change the bindings. Thanks bro o7
TXSailor Posted December 31, 2014 Posted December 31, 2014 ok, so when I go to instant action>cold start my binding for open put me on Zu position, and the hints that pop up when you put the mouse over Zu says that it's open while in reality they are closed, don't know if it is a bug, I think I will just change the bindings. Thanks bro o7 Hmmm. Try running it in the Zu position and see if the aircraft overheats. That will tell us if it's a problem with the key binding or if it's a modeling error. I know for me, I run it in either the Auf or Automatik and it stays cool. The manual also specifies "Auf".
golani79 Posted December 31, 2014 Posted December 31, 2014 The radiator controls were already reported as far as I know - should be a bug. >> DCS liveries by golani79 <<
venancio.avf Posted December 31, 2014 Posted December 31, 2014 if you set to Zu it closes, but the bind and the hint that show up when you use the mouse says it's open, so i think it's just a minor correction, not wrong with the funcionality.
Madmax Posted January 10, 2015 Posted January 10, 2015 Hello everyone, since the last update, the landing gear was more or little impact (drag) on the plane. Have you noticed this or not? @+Mad
Charly_Owl Posted January 12, 2015 Posted January 12, 2015 New quick guide for the 109 available here http://forums.eagle.ru/showthread.php?t=128890 Chuck's DCS Tutorial Library Chuck's Guides on Mudspike Chuck's Youtube Channel Chuck's Patreon
mugen Posted January 16, 2015 Posted January 16, 2015 (edited) Interesting article: flying the 109 (Red 7) Hi, i stumbled on an interesting article about flying the 109 (Red 7). http://www.klassiker-der-luftfahrt.de/geschichte/flugzeuge/messerschmitt-bf-109-so-fliegt-die-109/533908 This is an attempt to summarize some (imo) interesting statements in this text. The article was originally puplished by a german aviation magazine (Aerokurier) in 2005. Sorry, I'm not going to translate the hole text but will try to concentrate on mentioned flight and handling characteristics, basically. So, let's go. Walter Eichhorn did the first test flights of "red 7" after restoration and instructed the three owners on their BF 109 G4. Walter has been instructed on the 109 by Erich Hartmann, in 1986. Eichhorn has about 250 hrs on various 109 versions and is maybe the most experienced 109 Pilot, today (2005). Start up: When performing a cold start, reduce revs to 600 rpm immediately after the engine fires, to keep oil pressure within "green" specs. "After start up, you have just 7 minutes for take off, at normal temps and about 10 min in cold weather condition until the engine gets too hot",says Heinz. Water temp rises faster than oil temp and shall not exceed 100°C. Oil temp needs to be at least 40°C to ensure proper lubrication at T.O. power setting. Magnet check at 1800 rpm. Take off setup: Check undercarriage switch. Lock tail wheel. Set prop pitch to manual 12 o'clock. Set radiator manually open and flaps to 20°. Set elevator trimm to "+1" and el. fuelpump to on. Sigi Knoll (one of the 3 owners) compares the 109 with Formula 1. In just 6 sec the DB 605 A1 accelerates the Fighter AC to 180 Kmph and flies. While T.O., you need to be fully concentrated on the plane. For a moment, the aircraft dodges to the right because of the engine acceleration torque. Then, the torque of the 3m Propeller accesses and wants to turn the airplane strongly to the left, at least when the tail wheel lifts. But the left breaking tendency is well controllable if you advance the throttle slowly and smoothly. Walter Eichhorn lines up a bit off center and a little to the right to have some more angle and space to maneuver the AC along the runway. While the owners T.O. at 2600 rpm and 1.3 ATA, Walter contents himself with 2300 rpm and 1.15 ATA, which corresponds to the power setting for climb in the flight manual. "That's absolute sufficient", so W. Eichhorn. Although the 109 has an automatic controled propeller, the prop pitch is set to manual (12 o'clock) for T.O.. The usually automatic operating radiator flaps are set to manual too during T.O., to prevent them from moving unintentionally. "It would be fatal if one of the radiator flaps would close while T.O.", says Eichhorn. The elevator trimm is set to "+1", to prevent the AC to pitch up. "The AC shall not fly before the pilot wants it to", says W. Heinz. "The tail wheel should not be raised to high, because of the low prop clearence of just 17 cm". They T.O. with about 5° angle of attack. "It's quite amazing for me how fast the 109 accelerates in the inital climb", says Sigi Knoll. If you pull more than half a G while driving the undercarriage, the hydraulic will not be capable to retract the gear legs. Even within normal conditions it takes about 30 seconds until the red indicator light up. Flaps are beeing retracted by turning the handwheel. Prop pitch and radiator control are set to auto. Flying: The pilot has little workload once the systems are set to automatic. A perfect one lever control, by just adjusting manifold pressure. Red 7 does 360 Kmph at cruise setting (1.05 ATA, 2050 rpm). The red line on the airspeed indicator of the 'Albstadt' (town in South Germany) Bf 109 marks 550 kmph, limited by choice. In the past, the fighter was flown up to 750 kmph. "With their handling in the air, the plane enthuses everyone who has flown it. She behaves absolutely fair," notes Werner Grammel. "This also applies to the stall. At about 140 to 150 kmph, depending on the configuration, she drops away to the left. Release stick back pressure, control surfaces neutral and she's back again". Aerobatic maneuvers during demonstration displays are performed with climb power setting. "You have to take care, to not initiate rotation about longitudinal axis below 200 Kmph. At higher speed, above 300 kmph, the 109 gets increasingly heavy on controls, it's quite a hand full", explains Sigi Knoll. Landing: Landing has to be forsightfully planned. The process starts with switching off the radiator automatic. Manually fully opened, the spreaded radiator flaps at the wings trailing edge, close to the fusalage are decreasing the AC speed down to 300 kmph, at cruise power. The prop pitch is again switched to manual and set to 11:30. While further reducing power, below 250 kmph, flaps are set initially to 20°. Once decelerated to 200 kmph, the undercarriage is beeing extended. Still in wide downwind leg, flaps are set to 40°, and by a switch, the spark plugs can be burned. This should help to keep the egine running smoothly, when the plane has been flown with very low power over a longer time, previously. The final approach is done after a flat (low bank) turn at 180 kmph, Eichhorn prefers a slightly increased power setting. "Better 5 kmph too fast than being too slow", he says, "otherwise the descend rate is too high. Power changes in this speed range are connected with a strong turning about the vertical axis. You have to imagine that in the Messerschmitt, even small throttle changes are like 200 or 300 hp power difference. This has to be handled immediately". A lot of work that can quickly make the approach a wild ride, when descent rate, approach angle and speed do not match in the beginning. "The 109 wants to be treated like a glider on landing" once Bubi Hartmann had explained to Eichhorn. And this is confirmed by the three owners. A good method seems to be, to fly the final in a gentle curve. Thus, you keep the runway longest in sight. Just before touchdown, lined up straight, the landing tabs remain the only visual reference. "The Bf 109 is no wonder airplane," says Eichhorn, and Wilhelm Heinz even says that she is "meek as a lamp" if you treat her right. "But it's clearly a plane that has to be flown very disciplined, in precisely defined limits". Reserves, in case of errors, are depleted very quickly. This is probably one of the biggest differences to aircrafts usually flown by private pilots. Werner Grammel says it quite dramatically, "If you treat her properly, she is good to you too. If you don't, you'll get into hot water". More info about this and some more Messerschmitts @ http://www.flugmuseum-messerschmitt.de greez mugen Edited January 16, 2015 by mugen wrong translation, thanks to MiloMorai. 2 GIGABYTE Z690 Aorus Elite | i5-12600K | 32 GB DDR4 | 2x 980 NVMe | RTX 4090 | OR CV1 | Pimax 8K | PC360 | 34UM95 | 38GN950 | TIR5 + Track Clip Pro | T-50CM2 | TM Warthog + 27,5 cm extension | MFG Crosswind | Win10Pro x64
SlipBall Posted January 16, 2015 Posted January 16, 2015 (edited) Thanks mugen for taking the time to translate and post that, it is very interesting. I like the part about comparing to a Formula car and the 6 seconds till airborne Edited January 16, 2015 by GT 5.0
MiloMorai Posted January 16, 2015 Posted January 16, 2015 Once decelerated to 200 kmph, the undercarriage is being retracted. Nice and thanks but why is the undercarriage being retracted if the a/c is landing?
mugen Posted January 16, 2015 Posted January 16, 2015 Thanks mugen for taking the time to translate and post that, it is very interesting. I like the part about comparing to a Formula car and the 6 seconds till airborne Thank you GT 5.0, you're welcome. Nice and thanks but why is the undercarriage being retracted if the a/c is landing? Thank you MiloMorai for pointing me to this, it's corrected. :thumbup: greez mugen GIGABYTE Z690 Aorus Elite | i5-12600K | 32 GB DDR4 | 2x 980 NVMe | RTX 4090 | OR CV1 | Pimax 8K | PC360 | 34UM95 | 38GN950 | TIR5 + Track Clip Pro | T-50CM2 | TM Warthog + 27,5 cm extension | MFG Crosswind | Win10Pro x64
SlipBall Posted January 16, 2015 Posted January 16, 2015 Nice and thanks but why is the undercarriage being retracted if the a/c is landing? I think a wording or a translation error in the description for landing My take is to leave the gear retracted even during the long downwind leg, hold off to lower the gear it seems to me...
mugen Posted January 16, 2015 Posted January 16, 2015 Yes, me too. I extend the undercarriage just before or while turning into base. GIGABYTE Z690 Aorus Elite | i5-12600K | 32 GB DDR4 | 2x 980 NVMe | RTX 4090 | OR CV1 | Pimax 8K | PC360 | 34UM95 | 38GN950 | TIR5 + Track Clip Pro | T-50CM2 | TM Warthog + 27,5 cm extension | MFG Crosswind | Win10Pro x64
Merlin-27 Posted January 16, 2015 Posted January 16, 2015 Good read, Mugen. Thanks for sharing it. [sIGPIC][/sIGPIC] [Dogs of War] WWII COMBAT SERVER | P-51D - FW190-D9 - Me109-K4 Visit Our Website & Forum to Get More Info & Team Speak Access
javelina1 Posted January 17, 2015 Posted January 17, 2015 thanks Mugen, appreciate your post. MSI MAG Z790 Carbon, i9-13900k, NH-D15 cooler, 64 GB CL40 6000mhz RAM, MSI RTX4090, Yamaha 5.1 A/V Receiver, 4x 2TB Samsung 980 Pro NVMe, 1x 2TB Samsung 870 EVO SSD, Win 11 Pro, TM Warthog, Virpil WarBRD, MFG Crosswinds, 43" Samsung 4K TV, 21.5 Acer VT touchscreen, TrackIR, Varjo Aero, Wheel Stand Pro Super Warthog, Phanteks Enthoo Pro2 Full Tower Case, Seasonic GX-1200 ATX3 PSU, PointCTRL, Buttkicker 2, K-51 Helicopter Collective Control
Bucic Posted January 17, 2015 Posted January 17, 2015 Hi, i stumbled on an interesting article about flying the 109 (Red 7). http://www.klassiker-der-luftfahrt.de/geschichte/flugzeuge/messerschmitt-bf-109-so-fliegt-die-109/533908 This is an attempt to summarize some (imo) interesting statements in this text. The article was originally puplished by a german aviation magazine (Aerokurier) in 2005. Sorry, I'm not going to translate the hole text but will try to concentrate on mentioned flight and handling characteristics, basically. So, let's go. Walter Eichhorn did the first test flights of "red 7" after restoration and instructed the three owners on their BF 109 G4. Walter has been instructed on the 109 by Erich Hartmann, in 1986. Eichhorn has about 250 hrs on various 109 versions and is maybe the most experienced 109 Pilot, today (2005). Start up: When performing a cold start, reduce revs to 600 rpm immediately after the engine fires, to keep oil pressure within "green" specs. "After start up, you have just 7 minutes for take off, at normal temps and about 10 min in cold weather condition until the engine gets too hot",says Heinz. Water temp rises faster than oil temp and shall not exceed 100°C. Oil temp needs to be at least 40°C to ensure proper lubrication at T.O. power setting. Magnet check at 1800 rpm. Take off setup: Check undercarriage switch. Lock tail wheel. Set prop pitch to manual 12 o'clock. Set radiator manually open and flaps to 20°. Set elevator trimm to "+1" and el. fuelpump to on. Sigi Knoll (one of the 3 owners) compares the 109 with Formula 1. In just 6 sec the DB 605 A1 accelerates the Fighter AC to 180 Kmph and flies. While T.O., you need to be fully concentrated on the plane. For a moment, the aircraft dodges to the right because of the engine acceleration torque. Then, the torque of the 3m Propeller accesses and wants to turn the airplane strongly to the left, at least when the tail wheel lifts. But the left breaking tendency is well controllable if you advance the throttle slowly and smoothly. Walter Eichhorn lines up a bit off center and a little to the right to have some more angle and space to maneuver the AC along the runway. While the owners T.O. at 2600 rpm and 1.3 ATA, Walter contents himself with 2300 rpm and 1.15 ATA, which corresponds to the power setting for climb in the flight manual. "That's absolute sufficient", so W. Eichhorn. Although the 109 has an automatic controled propeller, the prop pitch is set to manual (12 o'clock) for T.O.. The usually automatic operating radiator flaps are set to manual too during T.O., to prevent them from moving unintentionally. "It would be fatal if one of the radiator flaps would close while T.O.", says Eichhorn. The elevator trimm is set to "+1", to prevent the AC to pitch up. "The AC shall not fly before the pilot wants it to", says W. Heinz. "The tail wheel should not be raised to high, because of the low prop clearence of just 17 cm". They T.O. with about 5° angle of attack. "It's quite amazing for me how fast the 109 accelerates in the inital climb", says Sigi Knoll. If you pull more than half a G while driving the undercarriage, the hydraulic will not be capable to retract the gear legs. Even within normal conditions it takes about 30 seconds until the red indicator light up. Flaps are beeing retracted by turning the handwheel. Prop pitch and radiator control are set to auto. Flying: The pilot has little workload once the systems are set to automatic. A perfect one lever control, by just adjusting manifold pressure. Red 7 does 360 Kmph at cruise setting (1.05 ATA, 2050 rpm). The red line on the airspeed indicator of the 'Albstadt' (town in South Germany) Bf 109 marks 550 kmph, limited by choice. In the past, the fighter was flown up to 750 kmph. "With their handling in the air, the plane enthuses everyone who has flown it. She behaves absolutely fair," notes Werner Grammel. "This also applies to the stall. At about 140 to 150 kmph, depending on the configuration, she drops away to the left. Release stick back pressure, control surfaces neutral and she's back again". Aerobatic maneuvers during demonstration displays are performed with climb power setting. "You have to take care, to not initiate rotation about longitudinal axis below 200 Kmph. At higher speed, above 300 kmph, the 109 gets increasingly heavy on controls, it's quite a hand full", explains Sigi Knoll. Landing: Landing has to be forsightfully planned. The process starts with switching off the radiator automatic. Manually fully opened, the spreaded radiator flaps at the wings trailing edge, close to the fusalage are decreasing the AC speed down to 300 kmph, at cruise power. The prop pitch is again switched to manual and set to 11:30. While further reducing power, below 250 kmph, flaps are set initially to 20°. Once decelerated to 200 kmph, the undercarriage is beeing extended. Still in wide downwind leg, flaps are set to 40°, and by a switch, the spark plugs can be burned. This should help to keep the egine running smoothly, when the plane has been flown with very low power over a longer time, previously. The final approach is done after a flat (low bank) turn at 180 kmph, Eichhorn prefers a slightly increased power setting. "Better 5 kmph too fast than being too slow", he says, "otherwise the descend rate is too high. Power changes in this speed range are connected with a strong turning about the vertical axis. You have to imagine that in the Messerschmitt, even small throttle changes are like 200 or 300 hp power difference. This has to be handled immediately". A lot of work that can quickly make the approach a wild ride, when descent rate, approach angle and speed do not match in the beginning. "The 109 wants to be treated like a glider on landing" once Bubi Hartmann had explained to Eichhorn. And this is confirmed by the three owners. A good method seems to be, to fly the final in a gentle curve. Thus, you keep the runway longest in sight. Just before touchdown, lined up straight, the landing tabs remain the only visual reference. "The Bf 109 is no wonder airplane," says Eichhorn, and Wilhelm Heinz even says that she is "meek as a lamp" if you treat her right. "But it's clearly a plane that has to be flown very disciplined, in precisely defined limits". Reserves, in case of errors, are depleted very quickly. This is probably one of the biggest differences to aircrafts usually flown by private pilots. Werner Grammel says it quite dramatically, "If you treat her properly, she is good to you too. If you don't, you'll get into hot water". More info about this and some more Messerschmitts @ http://www.flugmuseum-messerschmitt.de greez mugen I wish all of such info was curated into one place. All of the RL reports useful to virtual DCS Kurfurst pilots. It's going to get lost within hours. F-5E simpit cockpit dimensions and flight controls Kill the Bloom - shader glow mod Poor audio Doppler effect in DCS [bug] Trees - huge performance hit especially up close
Solty Posted January 17, 2015 Posted January 17, 2015 I wish all of such info was curated into one place. All of the RL reports useful to virtual DCS Kurfurst pilots. It's going to get lost within hours. +1 [sIGPIC][/sIGPIC]In 21st century there is only war and ponies. My experience: Jane's attack squadron, IL2 for couple of years, War Thunder and DCS. My channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCyAXX9rAX_Sqdc0IKJuv6dA
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