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Posted

According to manual and training mission I was never able to see this message? Where it should show itself? Am I doing something wrong?

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Posted

Nope, I don't "see" it ether.

Don't really need one though. Just primer for about 10 seconds and that seems to work for me.

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Posted

I remember seeing another post about this message being used for dev purposes.  I think the bug to report here is that the training still prompts us to look for that message, not that the message fails to appear.

My DCS Missions: Band of Buds series | The End of the T-55 Era | Normandy PvP | Host of the Formation Flight Challenge server

 

Supercarrier Reference Kneeboards

 

IRL: Private Pilot, UAS Test Pilot, Aircraft Designer, and... eh hem... DCS Enthusiast

Posted
6 hours ago, PL_Harpoon said:

Engine priming is bugged-out at the moment. You can start the engine without printing it.

From watching old real world training videos and reading the handbooks, it said to push the throttle forward as the engine was cutting off during shutdown in order to let it draw some fuel into the cylinders to make the next startup easier.  Yes, priming makes it easier to start IRL, but if there's fuel already in the cylinders and you crank the engine with mags on, it may be enough.  It's also warm outdoor temperatures in the DCS world, requiring less priming than a cold day.  You can use this info to pretend your plane already had enough fuel in the cylinders from the last pilot who shut it down.

My DCS Missions: Band of Buds series | The End of the T-55 Era | Normandy PvP | Host of the Formation Flight Challenge server

 

Supercarrier Reference Kneeboards

 

IRL: Private Pilot, UAS Test Pilot, Aircraft Designer, and... eh hem... DCS Enthusiast

Posted

On the warbirds I fly IRL I was instructed that we advance the throttle on cutting the mags to prevent the aircraft backfiring. Fuel will not just sit in the cylinders either, it will vapourise over time. Especially when you go to pull the prop through prior to the next start to prevent hydraulically locking the engine due to oil seeping into the lower cylinders on a radials.

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