ComDev
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Joined: 5/12/2006 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: hb921 quote:
ORIGINAL: emsoy There is a lot more to the ready timed than just putting ordnance on the hardpoints I am not questioning that. I am just asking, what is more to do with F/A-18 returnig from land strike, than with F/A-18 returning from CAP? I mean, it is obvious to me, that loadout you plan for the next sortie has considerable impact on ready time. But why loadout used on previous sortie has the same impact? Fair question, complex answer Flying a combat mission is like running a marathon, so pilots need to be de-briefed, get rested, etc. There is a limit to how many marathons a pilot can run per day, the maximum surge rate is typically around 2.0 or 2.1 marathons per pilot per day for 4-5 days. Not bad. So there are delays delays and more delays. Which is easy to understand if you stand on the carrier deck but not so easy to grasp when its just a figure on the computer screen. That figure that is supposed to cover the gazillion different reasons why sortie rates are as low as they are in real life. Strictly speaking, the CAP ready times should be considerably longer than they are in Command today but due to some RL exceptions they are left at 30-60 hr. Our plan down the road is to make some loadouts 'Hot Reload Capable' which means you can turn around the plane quickly (ref: some legendary A-10 and AV-8B missions, various Israeli operations, Swedish anti-invasion operations). So you can fly 2-3 (and maybe as many as 5) sorties in quick succession but with a terrible penalty in the end - the plane will be out of action for at least a day, maybe two. Most CAP loadouts would go in this category too. I.e. two sorties in quick succession and then 12-18hr break, or steady operations at 4hr ready times or whatever. The exact figures are not set in stone yet, need to test and balance out.
< Message edited by emsoy -- 5/23/2014 1:14:53 PM >
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