ShaggyHiK -> RE: Drop-tank usage quandry (12/1/2021 8:19:41 AM)
|
How will you use tanks to bombard an airfield in the depths of the territory if a real bomb suspension for work on airfields of that period occupied the same space as a tank under the plane's Fezula ?? You cannot have a tank and 96-2kg of bombs at once on a bf-109, these are mutually exclusive options. Specifically, it was not possible to restore the Air Force was laid in the fact that the Luftwaffe could continue raids on airfields not only on June 22. They were not as successful in raids as on June 22 (in the game they are hyper successful relative to reality in the early days, and not very effective thereafter), but they continued to raid airfields on the 23rd and 25th. Knocking out in the first place not so much aircraft as the airfield infrastructure. That led to the inability of Soviet aviation to counteract in the air in any significant way. In addition, the first successes allowed German aviation to quickly advance to airfields on Soviet territory and carry out deeper raids, so the withdrawal of Soviet aviation failed. The Germans, thanks to very good reconnaissance from the air, very quickly noticed the withdrawal of Soviet aviation to rear airfields and continued their attacks on them. The game also has the problem of intercepting a fast plane by a slow plane. Take the Ju-88, technically the I-16 flies with the Ju at roughly close speeds. I-16 a little faster, but this is only if the German plane does not go in a small dive. Then the Ju-88 accelerates and holds for a very long time the speed equal to or even greater than the I-16, not to mention the I-15, even the Yak-1, LaGG-3 and MiG-3 are not able to reach safe angles of attack or conduct enough of them to confidently hit the Ju-88. This is not taken into account in the game. Here the number of combat regiments of 60+ aircraft did not play into the hands of Soviet aviation. It was generally quite problematic to hide such a mass of aircraft, and the poor technical equipment of the airfield services, their lack of mobility, forced the Soviet aviation to concentrate on certain, well-prepared airfields, which the German aviation continued to bomb. This is what they actually encountered, as I said, it is not about the amount of fuel, but about the tactics of using and special ammunition and favorable conditions. As you already understood, if you give out the tanks, this will lead to an alternative history of the air war, it will be a kind of crutch to get a real result not by real methods, but by a spirical horse in vacuum.
|
|
|
|