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Posted

Just a note for those of you that might not have seen this yet.

 

I tried the Hard Day mission last night for the first time. I won't spoil it for anyone that hasn't tried it, but I ended up performing a rolling landing and hitting too hard. The bird started shaking during the rollout, and I couldn't understand why. Went to the external view and saw that my left main tire was blown. Visually! Don't have any screenies, but I am sure some of you will be able to reproduce.

 

This simulation is simply awesome.

Posted

No.1 reason for blowing up a tyre is touch down with parking brakes enabled. So always check to release them prior take-off.

"See, to me that's a stupid instrument. It tells what your angle of attack is. If you don't know you shouldn't be flying." - Chuck Yeager, from the back seat of F-15D at age 89.

=RvE=

Posted
does anyone know if bullets striking your wheels will pop them in-flight?

 

Yes, your wheel can take damage from enemy fire. It has happened to me a few times. SAMs exploding near your chopper can also pop them.

[sIGPIC][/sIGPIC]

Posted
No.1 reason for blowing up a tyre is touch down with parking brakes enabled. So always check to release them prior take-off.
Is there any parking brakes indicator in the cockpit? Presing LSHIFT + W I am not sure if I set or release the brakes.

Thermaltake Kandalf LCS | Gigabyte GA-X58A-UD3R | Etasis ET750 (850W Max) | i7-920 OC to 4.0 GHz | Gigabyte HD5850 | OCZ Gold 6GB DDR3 2000 | 2 X 30GB OCZ Vertex SSD in RAID 0 | ASUS VW266H 25.5" | LG Blue Ray 10X burner | TIR 5 | Saitek X-52 Pro | Logitech G930 | Saitek Pro flight rudder pedals | Windows 7 Home Premium 64 bit

Posted (edited)
Is there any parking brakes indicator in the cockpit? Presing LSHIFT + W I am not sure if I set or release the brakes.

 

On the stick there is the brake lever - it is animated.

 

And on the right back in the cockpit you can see the hydraulic pressure of the brake system.

 

zwischenablage017ulr.jpg

 

The parking brake has not the same power like the pedal brake.

 

Regards,

Airway

Edited by Airway
Posted (edited)
Is there any parking brakes indicator in the cockpit? Presing LSHIFT + W I am not sure if I set or release the brakes.

 

No.. but you can see if it is engaged by bringing up the Flight Controller Position Indicator using RCTRL + ENTER. See pages 6-27 and 6-28 of the manual. It's item #8 on the display.

 

EDIT: Thanks Airway, you are correct. The cyclic does have a "Wheel brake paddle". Never even dawned on me to look at since it's hard to see from the pilot's perspective. Out of sight, out of mind.

Edited by NullCharacter

[sIGPIC][/sIGPIC]

Posted
Is there any parking brakes indicator in the cockpit? Presing LSHIFT + W I am not sure if I set or release the brakes.

 

Hey Hajduk,

 

You can either check the parking break lever in front of the cyclic, which can be hard to do given the default point of view, or you can open the Controls Indicator Window by pressing RCtrl + Enter and looking for the blinking letter B on the upper left.

Posted

WOW! This community ROCKS! Thank you guys!

Thermaltake Kandalf LCS | Gigabyte GA-X58A-UD3R | Etasis ET750 (850W Max) | i7-920 OC to 4.0 GHz | Gigabyte HD5850 | OCZ Gold 6GB DDR3 2000 | 2 X 30GB OCZ Vertex SSD in RAID 0 | ASUS VW266H 25.5" | LG Blue Ray 10X burner | TIR 5 | Saitek X-52 Pro | Logitech G930 | Saitek Pro flight rudder pedals | Windows 7 Home Premium 64 bit

Posted

If you look carefully (easier if you can lean to the left), you can just see the bottom of the handle move forwards (PARK BRAKE OFF) or move backwards (PARK BRAKE ON) when you operate it. If you're not sure, a quick cycle of the park brake will soon tell you if it is off or on. :)

 

I only spotted this the other night by accident when I was zoomed into the Shkval and operated the park brake. :D

 

Best regards,

Tango.

Posted

Just a little tap on the wheel brake will release the parking break, so I've gotten into the habit of tapping my wheel brakes on final to insure my parking break has been released.

Posted
Just a little tap on the wheel brake will release the parking break, so I've gotten into the habit of tapping my wheel brakes on final to insure my parking break has been released.

 

Tapping the wheel brakes should be done directly after takeoff before raising the landing gear anyway I think. That's how it's done in the real world with retractable undercarriage aircraft. Centrifugal force and the change in the center of axis as it retracts creates a twisting motion putting a lot of strain on the structure. Plus if the wheel contacts the wheel housing while spinning it can also lead to damage.

Posted

That's only for airplanes where during retracting the wheel is spinning fast. Usualy on airplanes the brakes are automatically operated with the landing gear lever- gear up- brakes on- gear down- brakes off. Helicopters usualy take-off and land with zero or very small forward speed so this is not an issue.

"See, to me that's a stupid instrument. It tells what your angle of attack is. If you don't know you shouldn't be flying." - Chuck Yeager, from the back seat of F-15D at age 89.

=RvE=

Posted

Airtito can you confirm if the real Ka50 have a locking pin lever/switch for the nose wheel? because is really strange and dangerous if not.

 

Regards

Aser

AW-139 Pilot

Posted
That's only for airplanes where during retracting the wheel is spinning fast. Usualy on airplanes the brakes are automatically operated with the landing gear lever- gear up- brakes on- gear down- brakes off. Helicopters usualy take-off and land with zero or very small forward speed so this is not an issue.

 

Okay I'll take your word for it on the KA50. But I'll stick to doing it, as my instructor used to say "it may not be necessary but it is good airmanship".

Posted
Airtito can you confirm if the real Ka50 have a locking pin lever/switch for the nose wheel? because is really strange and dangerous if not.

 

Regards

Aser

 

I can not confirm.

"See, to me that's a stupid instrument. It tells what your angle of attack is. If you don't know you shouldn't be flying." - Chuck Yeager, from the back seat of F-15D at age 89.

=RvE=

  • 1 month later...
Posted

I can't get this landed for anything. I would appreciate some tips! I can handle the systems, but can't quite keep the aircraft in the sky / not crash. You landed on the active?

Posted

disregard that! I think i just passed it, but does it say something when you "pass" the mission? I landed, didn't die, etc, and it didn't say anything.

Posted

Just because I can't resist the moment to display my first landing, blown-tire and all. Hey, I didn't blow-up, and that was a first!

 

attachment.php?attachmentid=23489&d=1231421023

Remember, on Nov. 4th, vote for Black Shark for President!!!

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