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:salute:Performance fine tuned, will send the new files to Mike within the next few hours but I haven't found any test flight or performance table that results in any higher speed than 352mph (9000ft).
Love this but just one thing , if I may . I know Mike is looking for problems . The engoine sound ( which is fantastic) but I am not hearing any difference in engine sound at the top end . It sounds the same to me at 50" @ 3000rpm as it does at about 30" @ roughly 2,000rpm . Please tell me I'm wrong because the rest is totally enjoyable
Mr. Stolle,
I think the published 378mph TAS is widely known, but I could be wrong...
However, I pulled up the following document on the P-40N, take-off gross of 7,413, armed, at 57", 3000RPM, and a little above 10,000ft... there it is again, 378mph
See: HERE
I believe this aircraft is using the -81 also, rated, around 1,360hp, and of course, normally aspirated. As mike has depicted the stripped lightweight model as well, which would have the belly shackles removed, as well as guns, etc., I would expect the TAS number at critical altitude to be in the 385+ market, conservatively.
On these performance tables, for the N model, (see HERE) I'm seeing the upper 340-350ish mark at critical altitude, with a 6-gun ship, when an aircraft is gross around 8,000 plus... And these carry above 340mph TAS through 20,000ft. Currently, in the sim, I can not make enough power at 20,000, at those weights, to get anywhere close to that. I believe it says they were making around 39" at 20,000ft.
My test example was absolute minimum, take-off gross around 6,200lbs, unarmed...coming in at around 335mph, 57", 3000 RPM, around 10K. That's the best I can do. Haven't got serious with the heavier and more armed ships. Ambient temperature were around 70 degrees Fahrenheit at 5,000 (airport elevation), and maybe around 35-40 degrees at the 10K mark. Weather clear. Winds zero for the purpose of testing.
Hope this helps!
Really liking the overall feel, and control, And the low-speed numbers seem quite accurate.
- Joseph
Mr. Stolle,
I think the published 378mph TAS is widely known, but I could be wrong...
- Joseph
Are you guys able to overheat the engine on this baby? I tried to idle it on ground cowl flaps closed air temperature being over 20C and then tried to fly the plane with quite high power hugging the ground and keeping it in warm air for a while. Either case coolant temperature seems to stop on the green shy of 100C no matter of the position of cowl flaps. You would think that it should overheat quite quickly with cowl flaps fully closed or am I missing something here?
Mr. Stolle,
I think the published 378mph TAS is widely known, but I could be wrong...
However, I pulled up the following document on the P-40N, take-off gross of 7,413, armed, at 57", 3000RPM, and a little above 10,000ft... there it is again, 378mph
See: HERE
I believe this aircraft is using the -81 also, rated, around 1,360hp, and of course, normally aspirated. As mike has depicted the stripped lightweight model as well, which would have the belly shackles removed, as well as guns, etc., I would expect the TAS number at critical altitude to be in the 385+ market, conservatively.
On these performance tables, for the N model, (see HERE) I'm seeing the upper 340-350ish mark at critical altitude, with a 6-gun ship, when an aircraft is gross around 8,000 plus... And these carry above 340mph TAS through 20,000ft. Currently, in the sim, I can not make enough power at 20,000, at those weights, to get anywhere close to that. I believe it says they were making around 39" at 20,000ft.
My test example was absolute minimum, take-off gross around 6,200lbs, unarmed...coming in at around 335mph, 57", 3000 RPM, around 10K. That's the best I can do. Haven't got serious with the heavier and more armed ships. Ambient temperature were around 70 degrees Fahrenheit at 5,000 (airport elevation), and maybe around 35-40 degrees at the 10K mark. Weather clear. Winds zero for the purpose of testing.
Hope this helps!
Really liking the overall feel, and control, And the low-speed numbers seem quite accurate.
- Joseph
The table you quoted shows that the -81 engine used in this test delivered a whopping 1480hp but the standard -81 delivers 'only' 1200hp AFAIK. That explains the difference IMO.I think the published 378mph TAS is widely known, but I could be wrong...
However, I pulled up the following document on the P-40N, take-off gross of 7,413, armed, at 57", 3000RPM, and a little above 10,000ft... there it is again, 378mph
See: HERE
The table you quoted shows that the -81 engine used in this test delivered a whopping 1480hp but the standard -81 delivers 'only' 1200hp AFAIK. That explains the difference IMO.
Hi Mike or John
Any advice - as you know the tail plane surfaces are split on the repaint kit. What is odd is that the squares on my attempted repaint seem to resise to a different scale on each separate surface. can this be rectified somehow before I spend 2 hours reworking the black squares?
The table you quoted shows that the -81 engine used in this test delivered a whopping 1480hp but the standard -81 delivers 'only' 1200hp AFAIK. That explains the difference IMO.
The table you quoted shows that the -81 engine used in this test delivered a whopping 1480hp but the standard -81 delivers 'only' 1200hp AFAIK. That explains the difference IMO.
.....According to the P-40N Operational Suitability Report (N-1), this seems to back up what AHT gives for the V-1710-81 power ratings.
Looking at the max speed results table in this report, it gives 355 TAS @ 15000ft @ 56 inches/3000 RPM, and 244 TAS @ SL @ the same power setting, at an AUW of 7500lbs....
Thank-you for the additional information Paul. Very interesting! And the report you mention, the aircraft is considerably heavier than my test platform within the simulator. I fear I'd be hard pressed to reach 320mph TAS at 15,000ft, if I was at 7,500lbs....
- Joseph
Just a note to say that there are updates on the way. When they're ready, previous purchasers will be notified (new purchasers will be getting the updated version at time of purchase). So far, these correct a few model issues, plus Bernt has sent some new airfiles to be incorporated. More news when the updates are ready.
Mike