Atmospheric operation of small craft, incorrect assumptions

barnest2 said:
I think you would still have turning fights,

No, you only get into a turning dog fight because you have to maintain forward speed or you drop out of the sky. Otherwise you'd just sit still and pivot on the Yaw axis and shoot.
 
DFW said:
far-trader said:
You keep coming back to this style of "winning"

Has nothing to do with "winning". I've referenced basic aeronautics. Do you REALLY want me to start explaining Bernoulli's principle which is needed to be understood before dissecting why airplanes behave the way they do? Also, I never claimed to be an expert on anything. Just claimed to have basic understanding of the principles involved. Don't ask me about nuclear physics
as I'd fall flat on my face...

My apologies then, I seem to have mistaken your intent.

I still think (back to the original issue) you're misapplying reality and your own concepts of the sci-fi elements to argue that the rules are written poorly, or wrong. When the proper logical approach would seem to be taking the rules as written and applying them to figure out how it's working. Now if the rules said something blatantly wrong, like "wings don't provide lift" I'd throw a fit. But the rules saying something like "grav drives don't perform as well as wings for maneuverability" is quite acceptable, at least until someone develops actual grav drives that do perform as well as wings for maneuverability.
 
DFW said:
No, you only get into a turning dog fight because you have to maintain forward speed or you drop out of the sky. Otherwise you'd just sit still and pivot on the Yaw axis and shoot.

I tell you what then, you sit still and rotate, and I'll stand off over the horizon and lob ALRAAM's at you... deal?
 
far-trader said:
But the rules saying something like "grav drives don't perform as well as wings for maneuverability" is quite acceptable, at least until someone develops actual grav drives that do perform as well as wings for maneuverability.

If you can hover; which according to the rules of the game you can do, you can outmaneuver a craft with wings that has to maintain quite a bit of speed to maintain flight. There's no way around that.

Outright speed is a different story of course.
 
DFW said:
far-trader said:
But the rules saying something like "grav drives don't perform as well as wings for maneuverability" is quite acceptable, at least until someone develops actual grav drives that do perform as well as wings for maneuverability.

If you can hover; which according to the rules of the game you can do, you can outmaneuver a craft with wings that has to maintain quite a bit of speed to maintain flight. There's no way around that.

Outright speed is a different story of course.

Seems to me hovering vs supersonic flight the contest would go to the fastest. Speed is life would still hold. The hovering craft would be an easier target.

Are you perhaps imagining instant stop and instant full speed for your grav drive craft? Hence my reference to mythical flying saucers above. That's the thing I've been picturing the whole time to support your choice of air superiority for grav drives. And it would be, IF that were the case but I don't believe it is in the rules as written.
 
barnest2 said:
I tell you what then, you sit still and rotate, and I'll stand off over the horizon and lob ALRAAM's at you... deal?

Sure, I'll maneuver outside its flight envelope...
 
I think there is one problem with this... the winner out of hover vs speed wouldn't be the decided by these, but by who had the best sensors.
The side with the best sensors would be able to lock up an enemy faster and, if their weapons were good enough, shoot them down. However, the fastest would probably have the more general advantage because they are more likely to be able to evade missiles and other weapons fire...
 
far-trader said:
Seems to me hovering vs supersonic flight the contest would go to the fastest. Speed is life would still hold. The hovering craft would be an easier target.

Given equal weapons (air to air missiles, the supersonic plane is either out of the dog fight or turning to gain facing to be able to fire. Either way, the craft that doesn't have to maintain a given minimum speed and can turn faster can get weapons off more frequently.
 
DFW said:
Sure, I'll maneuver outside its flight envelope...

Which would surely be just as hard in any aircraft? unless these grav aircraft your presenting have god-awfully silly manoeuvrability its very difficult to fly outside of a missiles flight envelope, because they're comparatively tiny and very stupidly manoeuvrable...
 
barnest2 said:
However, the fastest would probably have the more general advantage because they are more likely to be able to evade missiles and other weapons fire...

You can't outrun the missile. You might be able to out maneuver based on flight envelopes. The grav craft has the clear advantage in this.
 
DFW said:
Otherwise you'd just sit still and pivot on the Yaw axis and shoot.
Behaving like a sitting duck seems a very bad way to try to outmaneuver
a missile fired at a vehicle, and just hoping that it does not hit, the armour
is good enough or one manages to shoot it down is also not convincing.
So, unless a vehicle has the agility to move out of harm's way quickly and
in unexpected ways, it is just an object for easy target practice.
 
barnest2 said:
DFW said:
Sure, I'll maneuver outside its flight envelope...

Which would surely be just as hard in any aircraft?

Nope, the airplane has huge restraints on its envelope due to maintaining lift that don't exists for the grav vehicle.
 
DFW said:
If you can hover; which according to the rules of the game you can do, you can outmaneuver a craft with wings that has to maintain quite a bit of speed to maintain flight. There's no way around that.

Sure once grav become available wings are obsolete for generating lift. But we haven't replaced all of our boats with hovercraft yet, if you follow my analogy.

Besides, if we're talking about spacecraft, why are we talking about low-speed maneuverability? At hypersonic re-entry and launch velocities, a ship that has no streamlining is not going to be able to rotate itself away from its vector without great difficulty. Heck, even WITH streamlining that becomes difficult.

One more thing - a fighter jet can pull more G's than most small-craft M-drives can generate. Though "I am not a pilot" and "I am not a physicist", F=MA means that the fighter can call on more force to change its vector than the M-drive craft can, right?
 
rust said:
Behaving like a sitting duck seems a very bad way to try to outmaneuver a missile fired at a vehicle,

Sitting and dropping, reversing, etc., would be VERY difficult for the missile to follow as it also has to maintain lift or fall and crash. Current missiles would be at a loss against such a flying craft as they are designed to go against other airplanes... Anyway, go ask a fighter pilot what he would think about going up against a grav vehicle armed and equipped as his plane is... :wink:
 
Yeah sure, modern aircraft against a vehicle would most likely lose, i'm talking about two equal tech vehicles..

Also, please point out the lift generating surfaces on a missile that were not originally designed as flight control surfaces...
 
hdan said:
At hypersonic re-entry and launch velocities, a ship that has no streamlining is not going to be able to rotate itself away from its vector without great difficulty. Heck, even WITH streamlining that becomes difficult.

If a pilot was stupid enough to go for hypersonic reentry, yes. However, with the ability to negate gravity, you can enter the atmosphere at 1 mph if you wanted.

BTW - I didn't say no streamlining, I'm talking about no lifting surfaces (airframe). A 20 ton launch has better streamlining (reduced drag) than something with a lifting surface (induced drag), parasitic drag being equal.
 
barnest2 said:
Also, please point out the lift generating surfaces on a missile that were not originally designed as flight control surfaces...

They were designed from the beginning to do both. Irrelevant as it still has to maintain lift regardless...
 
ok, but the control fins only provide a minimum of lift? and it still doesn't explain how you will evade a proximity fused high manoeuvrability missile unless your aircraft has near equal manoeuvrability to said missile... yes?

Whilst i dont have an academic degree, i have a great interest in this sort of thing and have read plenty about aircraft in general, and im studying military history, so its important too me...
 
Somebody said:
After all Bernoulli isn't restricted to planes and some of us have academic degrees...

I never stated such a thing. Please quote where I stated that. I'll wait...
 
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