D4n Posted October 31, 2021 Share Posted October 31, 2021 (edited) When having jammed the flaps into extended position, shouldn't they break off or slam into retracted position when in a vertical Mach 0.9 dive? (Have aerodynamic tests proven that F-14 flaps could stand such a strong air-pressure? ) I tried kinda everything to either rip them off to "get rid" of the jammed flaps "issue" or to slam them back into retracted position by force... Edited October 31, 2021 by D4n DCS Wishlist: 2K11 Krug SA-4 Ganef SAM, VR-TrackIR icons next to player names in score-chart PvP: 100+ manual player-kills with Stingers on a well known dynamic campaign server - 100+ VTOL FARP landings & 125+ hours AV-8B, F-14 crew, royal dutch airforce F-16C - PvP campaigns since 2013 DCS server-admins: please adhere to a common sense gaming industry policy as most server admins throughout the industry do. (After all there's enough hostility on the internet already which really doesn't help anyone. Thanks.) Dell Visor VR headset, Ryzen 5 5600 (6C/12T), RTX 2060 - basic DCS-community rule-of-thumb: Don't believe bad things that a PvP pilot claims about another PvP pilot without having analyzed the existing evidence Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Baz000 Posted October 31, 2021 Share Posted October 31, 2021 If you jam them, you fly home like that with them jammed... Which is why IRL you try not to jam them like that in the first place when you have 6 hours to fly back to the boat. Oh and 3-4 air to air refuelings to perform. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Blackeye Posted October 31, 2021 Share Posted October 31, 2021 (edited) 17 hours ago, D4n said: When having jammed the flaps into extended position, shouldn't they break off or slam into retracted position when in a vertical Mach 0.9 dive? (Have aerodynamic tests proven that F-14 flaps could stand such a strong air-pressure? ) I tried kinda everything to either rip them off to "get rid" of the jammed flaps "issue" or to slam them back into retracted position by force... Well the driving mechanism is usually designed in a way forces cannot reverse turn the system (e.g. worm drive) so in order to slam back you'd have to break the mechanism and/or the mounts probably causing severe damage to the wing in that process. Not to mention that there's no guarantee that the process will be symmetric, so you may end up with an aircraft that has full flaps on one wing and gaping holes on the other while diving at M 0.9 towards the ground... There are better moments to eject. That's why I think they probably never did test for "at what speed will the flaps rip off" just confirming that they won't at sane speeds. If you over-speed your flaps the best thing you can do is slow down and see if they will retract at lower speeds, if not you'll have to limp home or eject. Edited October 31, 2021 by Blackeye 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
draconus Posted November 3, 2021 Share Posted November 3, 2021 Good or bad piloting - doesn't matter - this would just need some DM implementation. 1 Win10 i7-10700KF 32GB RTX3060 Rift S T16000M TWCS TFRP FC3 F-14A/B F-15E CA SC NTTR PG Syria Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
r4y30n Posted November 6, 2021 Share Posted November 6, 2021 Don’t think I’ve seen this effect in DCS but I’ve definitely seen it on a P-51 in another sim where the flaps could jam or break when overstressed and you were never quite sure which it would be. It was a cool visual effect to see the flap literally flapping in the wind. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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