Dudley Henriques wrote:
Saville wrote:
Well ok I'll give you my thoughts:
What a terrible show.
(Caveat: I saw all of the first show and half of the second).
The vaunted air combat setups are nothing more than formation flying of the two adversaries and an occasional weaving back and forth.
Somebody needs to fire the writer - Moga's lines are cheesy and over the top.
I do like the cockpit descriptions.
Dogfights was a clearly superior format and presentation. Much more informative.
I'm not surprised. Any meaningful comparison between competing fighters would involve maneuvering in each airplane's flight envelope in excess of where the average warbird owner would feel comfortable putting a million dollar plus airplane.
I can't speak for other warbird pilots, but I seldom put a WW2 fighter in the air with the intention of putting more than 4 or so g's on it.
In any serious maneuvering situation involving the seeking of advantage, the airplane will be above corner at least part of the time and loading it above corner can take the airplane out further in g than the average owner might want to be.
I haven't seen the show and am not familiar with the format, but if real aircraft are being used, what I've said here might be the cause for what you saw on the screen.
Hope this helps a bit.
My beef is the fact that the advertisements suggest the battle will be "re-created" using flyable warbirds, and then showing some - admittedly nice - formation flying and a couple of weaves. If owners/pilots of the warbirds don't want to do much more than weaves that's fine by me - just don't advertise it as anything else.
What Moga does is discuss the various design choices between the two a/c and detail how that translates into performance differences. Fair enough. So why not give a little low-stress demo
without risking much. For example, they could have done a nice, sedate 2G turn in, say, the Zero and the P-38 (Episode 2) and that would show the viewer who has the advantage after 180, 360, etc degrees of turn. They could have even started off at the opposite sides of the circle. Are they showing the two a/c maxed out in the turn? No. But you don't need to run them that hard to provide an illustration.
They could have started each a/c in line abreast, and put them both in a climb, and viewers might see the difference in performance. And maybe (in the case of various a/c matchups) show that done at different altitudes.
Whether those sorts of visual demonstrations would be entertaining is a different question.
But again, my beef is with the advertisement vs what is delivered.
You probably have a point. That's Hollywood!!!
How these shows usually get started is that somebody with the "idea" pitches the powers that be (the producers) and a meeting is held. The problem usually arises when they actually go out and contract the owners of the birds. The guys like having the airplanes featured but when the wheels hit the wells it's the owners who determine how much actual stress they want on their airplanes, and this is the way it should be.
I agree that the hype on a show like this will exceed what the owners most likely will allow and that the end result will be less than the hype.
As for the format to compare dissimilar fighters; the only way this can be done realistically is to have each aircraft at 50% fuel and head to head. Even then, the unknown factor, and perhaps the most important factor of all will be missing from the equation; that being the difference between the cockpits, or who is flying what
Bottom line is that in my opinion anyway, any dogfight show featuring actual WW2 fighters being flown by their owners will reflect the care and concern those owners have for these aircraft, so the hype will exceed the result.