RAM
Posts: 402
Joined: 5/1/2000 From: Bilbao,Vizcaya,Spain Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Nikademus Thats fine. I hold the opinion that the Ki-43 was a decent fighter 'at the time' as well vs. "rubbish", and it's impact on the battlefield and the historical results support this. Don't agree. But we can be sending quotes to each other for the rest of the month, and I think we woudln't still agree. You base your opinion on the Oscar results during the first 12 months of the war. I base my opinion on the Oscar quality as a fighter vs the allied fighter arsenal...that will always lead to different conclussions, so it's not quite useful to keep on debating it... Anyway multiple opinions are something that enrich us...and give us the chance to hold this kind of interesting debates :). I don't agree on your point of view, but I respect it, Nik, even when I'm trying to support another completely different opinion on the plane :) quote:
And the Ki-43 accelerated faster, could climb better, turn better and had superior all around maneverability unless one was talking a power dive. superior all-around maneouverability isn't true. At high speed the Oscar was VERY hard to maneouver. (and I'm not talking about power dives where it could't be maneouvered at all). however what WW2 air combat proved, as did Korea and Vietnam, was that better climbrate, acceleration and turnrate at low speeds, weren't as important in a fighter as Dive, Zoom, firepower and hispeed maneouverability. And on those departments the Hurri (and almost any allied fighter) was quite superior to the Oscar. To make another comparison the Fw190A3 was considered as immensely superior to the Spit V, a plane which was thought as be totally outclassed by the Würger...and the Spit V had better acceleration, climbrate and low speed maneouverability... quote:
You cant seperate the pilot issue any more than you can seperate the tactical sitaution when talking plane vs plane, otherwise you end up with a sterile comparison only appropriate for a flight simm where most scenerios involve "duels" up to a point this is what we're doing here, comparing one plane with another as an one on one machine. As I said the Spitfire V was vastly outclassed by the 190, a fact supported by everyone who flew in WW2. However if a flight of four Fw190s was suprised by 16 Spit Vs flying 4000 feet higher,more probably than not the 190s would lose the fight. However the 190 would STILL be a best fighter than the Spitfire V no matter it lost that encounter. Hope you understand what I want to mean here. As such,too, a Spit V piloted by an expert pilot probably would win vs a Fw190 piloted by a novice. However that STILL doesn't mean anything for qualifying one plane as better than another. So in a plane vs plane comparison the tactical situation and relative piltot quality of the engagement should be left out of the equation to reach an accurate and objective conclussion about which plane is better... quote:
What 'I' said was that an Oscar, as with a Zero could preform energy tactics. You are interpreting that as trying to follow an Allied fighter in a fast zoom dive, something that neither plane could do well. That is a far cry from being able to dive and bounce an opponent, which both planes could do and did do during the fighting. Ok, then let me rephrase the sentence. The Oscar wasn't very successful at bouncing enemies because it's inherent horrible hispeed maneouvering qualities. Better that way? ;). quote:
Congratulations. I'm happy for you that you managed to win an air simm mock battle. What does this have to do with the subject of calling the Ki-43 "rubbish"? nothing, but it has quite a lot to do with your affirmation that "how easy countermoves sound from the ground. Kind of like monday morning quarterbacking.". If I'm saying what I'm saying is because I know about air combat tactics and stuff, and have put it in practice in an environment where, if you don't dominate it, you won't get any kind of success. I did have quite success in it. In a realistic air simulator you won't achieve to be an excellent pilot, but you can learn, understand, and master, a lot of real life combat tactics, maneouvers, offensive and defensive moves, and disengagement strategies. quote:
I never said this escape tactic would not work with sufficient warning. However its when such a tactic is inflated to the point where someone says, oh.....i'm facing [insert plane]? no problem, all i have to do is [insert tactic]....problem solved. Fighter combat doesn't work that way. Maybe it does in air simm duels....but not in real life. bassically this is right. If the pilot of a P40, for instance, sees a Ki43 higher readying himself to dive, and times the moves I described with the dive of the Oscar, he will save his a$$. The Oscar simply can't follow such a move (in fact a Zero mostly couldn't either), and this kind of disengagement tactic was used in real life with exceptional success by the allied pilots facing Oscar or Zeros. So fighter combat DOES work that way...because in real life this tactic was standard (diving and changing direction at speeds where the japanese fighters couldn't follow, and disengaging), and worked neatly...so in real life it WORKED that way ;). quote:
The Allied opposition over Malaya was a mixture of green and battle hardened veterans from the BoB. Other factors were present as well, some of which i've already mentioned. The AVG were present as well and while lacking actual battle experience were the best trained in terms of using the energy tactics described herin. Initially, they fared no better than the RAF. You cannot seperate the attributes of the planes from these factors. The Japanese still needed a high preformance fighter in order to assure success in these operations. and which kind of planes were at malaya? Buffalos? Blenheims?. You qualify it as a decent opposition?. the AVG I already said was well trained and ready to mix it up vs the japanese because they had learnt enough of japanese tactics to know how to fly their planes. And the AVG fared really well against the Oscar...in a not-that-extraordinary plane as the P40. quote:
To reitterate, i'm not nominating the Ki-43 for plane of the year. I'm simply stating that the plane was not rubbish, to be discounted once more intell about the craft was available. You can discount the historical data. My research led me to rethink my initial appraisal of the aircraft. for early 1942 the Oscar was outperformed by almost every of its contemporaries, which, too, had better qualities for the kind of fight which mattered in WW2: High speed fighting, Boom'n'Zoom, and Hit'n'Run tactics, all of them where the Oscar sucked bad. I can't see the way to not qualify it as rubbish...even with its initial successes.
< Message edited by RAM -- 10/18/2004 3:53:36 PM >
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RAM "Look at me! look at me!!! Not like that! NOT LIKE THAT!!!"
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