=475FG= Dawger Posted November 14, 2024 Posted November 14, 2024 2 hours ago, Krupi said: The main issue isn’t the torque it isn’t the rudder or even the ailerons. The incident all stems from the elevator, as soon as the nose pulls up he was pretty much doomed. After the pitch up the pilot has no control, the only one that has any effect is when the elevator is pushed forward but by then it is too late. Watch the last video, slowed down it is pretty clear. Torque related accidents occur when the throttle is opened at low speed and it is the sudden increase coupled with the lack of authority from control surfaces which lead to an accident. That is not the case here. It is as if you are desperately wishing the existence of torque away despite plain evidence. Don’t worry. The Corsair will not be modeled with real world levels of torque. They know their audience and its expectations.
ED Team Yo-Yo Posted November 14, 2024 ED Team Posted November 14, 2024 10 hours ago, =475FG= Dawger said: The pilot mistake is not enough right rudder to counteract the torque of the engine, resulting in a strong left yaw as soon as he was off the deck and things go downhill from there. If there was no engine torque, he doesn’t die. You’re mixing up torque with P-factor and downwash effects. Torque is a rotational moment generated as a reaction to the propeller’s swirling air mass (according to the conservation of angular momentum), which creates a leftward rolling moment on the aircraft. Right rudder is primarily applied to counteract yaw caused by P-factor and downwash effects, not torque itself. At positive angles of attack (AoA), the P-factor creates a leftward yaw and positive pitch moment by increasing AoA on the descending blade, becoming more pronounced with increased speed due to differential airflow over the propeller blades. Downwash is more influential at low speeds , decreasing as speed increases. Meanwhile, P-factor takes effect once there is sufficient speed and high AoA to cause noticeable local AoA changes on the propeller blades. Overall, the interaction of these forces and their impact on rudder trim requirements are clearly visible in trim diagrams. Torque itself requires very slight ailerons input. 9 Ніщо так сильно не ранить мозок, як уламки скла від розбитих рожевих окулярів There is nothing so hurtful for the brain as splinters of broken rose-coloured spectacles. Ничто так сильно не ранит мозг, как осколки стекла от разбитых розовых очков (С) Me
=475FG= Dawger Posted November 14, 2024 Posted November 14, 2024 8 hours ago, Yo-Yo said: You’re mixing up torque with P-factor and downwash effects. Torque is a rotational moment generated as a reaction to the propeller’s swirling air mass (according to the conservation of angular momentum), which creates a leftward rolling moment on the aircraft. Right rudder is primarily applied to counteract yaw caused by P-factor and downwash effects, not torque itself. At positive angles of attack (AoA), the P-factor creates a leftward yaw and positive pitch moment by increasing AoA on the descending blade, becoming more pronounced with increased speed due to differential airflow over the propeller blades. Downwash is more influential at low speeds , decreasing as speed increases. Meanwhile, P-factor takes effect once there is sufficient speed and high AoA to cause noticeable local AoA changes on the propeller blades. Overall, the interaction of these forces and their impact on rudder trim requirements are clearly visible in trim diagrams. Torque itself requires very slight ailerons input. Naw, when I say torque I very obviously mean the entire menu of effects from an engine swinging a prop. P-factor, precession, rotating airflow, asymmetric downwash and the voodoo that you do. Even in the weakest motor airplane, torque ( and all of the other effects previously mentioned or not) is a constant presence that must be accounted for all the time. Anyone who has actually flown a high powered prop aircraft knows DCS is largely wrong in this because you don’t need to trim very much at all in DCS props (admittedly to varying degrees across modules) Anyway, this conversation is tiresome and pointless, as no one here is interested in how it should be. I’m a dot. AMF.
ED Team Yo-Yo Posted November 14, 2024 ED Team Posted November 14, 2024 Negative sir, YOU HAVE to trim it at every power change. And, finally, you have to prove that DCS P-51 or any other prop plane have very different trim curves from the curves that were recorded for the real plane. And only these graphs give adequate information, how it should be. 11 Ніщо так сильно не ранить мозок, як уламки скла від розбитих рожевих окулярів There is nothing so hurtful for the brain as splinters of broken rose-coloured spectacles. Ничто так сильно не ранит мозг, как осколки стекла от разбитых розовых очков (С) Me
Convoy Posted December 30, 2024 Posted December 30, 2024 It's not torque roll. From what I see the plane yaws left heavily, stalling the left wing because the giant engine is blocking airflow over it. The right wing has full lift, and causes the plane to roll over. Since the left wing is stalled, a comparatively small aileron on the right wing isn't going to counteract that, thus making it unrecoverable. Which is exactly what happens in DCS if you don't counteract with rudder on takeoff. You yaw to the left, left wing stalls, and drinks will be raised in the O-club to your demise. 1
grafspee Posted 23 hours ago Posted 23 hours ago On 12/30/2024 at 6:31 PM, Convoy said: It's not torque roll. From what I see the plane yaws left heavily, stalling the left wing because the giant engine is blocking airflow over it. The right wing has full lift, and causes the plane to roll over. Since the left wing is stalled, a comparatively small aileron on the right wing isn't going to counteract that, thus making it unrecoverable. Which is exactly what happens in DCS if you don't counteract with rudder on takeoff. You yaw to the left, left wing stalls, and drinks will be raised in the O-club to your demise. Agree, if any significant torque counter reaction was present, that plane would start to roll immediately after leaving the deck of the aircraft carrier. System specs: I7 14700KF, Gigabyte Z790 Aorus Elite, 64GB DDR4 3600MHz, Gigabyte RTX 4090,Win 11, 48" OLED LG TV + 42" LG LED monitor
lee1hy Posted 14 hours ago Posted 14 hours ago anyone reproduce the DCS torque crash like in the video with FM now? kim_123456#3214 My awesome liveries user files https://shorturl.at/cdKV5
plott1964 Posted 13 hours ago Posted 13 hours ago Feature F-4U Corsair P-47 Thunderbolt Role Carrier-based fighter Fighter and fighter-bomber Wingspan 40 ft 0 in (12.19 m) 40 ft 0 in (12.19 m) Length 33 ft 4 in (10.16 m) 36 ft 1 in (10.99 m) Top Speed Approximately 446 mph (718 km/h) Approximately 433 mph (697 km/h) Service Ceiling About 40,000 ft (12,192 m) About 40,000 ft (12,192 m) Armament 6 x .50 caliber M2 Browning MGs, bombs, and rockets 8 x .50 caliber M2 Browning MGs, bombs, and rockets Flight Characteristics Excellent speed and maneuverability, especially at low altitudes Ruggedness and ability to absorb damage, effective at high altitudes My thoughts: ED should communicate to Magnitude 3 that the P-47 seems to work just fine and share some code for Pete's sake. PC specs: Intel Core i7-13700K [Raptor Lake 3.4GHz Sixteen-Core LGA 1700] (stock clock)/64.0 GB RAM/RTX 3080 GPU (stock clock)/Windows 10 Home/Multiple M.2 SSD Drives/T.Flight HOTAS X/HP Reverb G2
Gunfreak Posted 8 hours ago Posted 8 hours ago 5 hours ago, lee1hy said: anyone reproduce the DCS torque crash like in the video with FM now? Doesn't seem possible. Honestly both the Spitfire and P51 are far harder to control. I've slammed the throttle forwards and back. And only slight rudder is needed to keep it under control. i7 13700k @5.2ghz, GTX 5090 OC, 128Gig ram 4800mhz DDR5, M2 drive.
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