Is 220 KIAS a never exceed or max operating speed?
Good morning Mike,
Please please please remember I am NOT NOT kind of crazy flight simmer who likes to fly at top speed in most unrealistic manner. According to various info, 220 kt is max operating speed and 180-190 kt is cruising speed at 10,000 ft.
I always believe in recreation of real world realistic flights in most realism manner.
You got to remember there are TWO kinds of realistic cruising speeds for DC-4s, C-54s, and Carvairs. The cruising speed for those planes when brand new and in regular daily service during 1950s are MUCH higher than cruising speeds of Buffalo or any airline DC-4s/C-54s at present 21st century era. Buffalo or any airline would fly those planes at much lower speeds in 21st century than what planes would normally fly in era 1950s. In other words, flying at 155kt would be normal cruising speed for Buffalo Airways DC-4s/C-54s in 21st century but NOT normal for American Airlines or Pan Am DC-4 which could do at higher but normal cruising speed of 180-190kt in 1950s.
So I am setting speed BASED on which year any of those aircrafts flew in the past to recreate most realistic realism of historic flights so I would be flying Carvairs in era 1960s at normal cruising speed of 180-190 kt which is the speed I am unable to recreate in most realistic manner. If it was Buffalo Airways DC-4/C-54, that would be perfect slower speed at 155kt (I think Buffalo Airways picks 145kt) and I would not be asking around here for help to solve the problem.
I will see what I can find out.
Would appreciate that
One way to cheat is modify the aircraft.cfg file: the line power_scalar = 1 in 10% increments to see what happens
I am definitely not going to tinker with aircraft.cfg or otherwise I would invalidate warranty and lose tech support from Flight Replicas. The only exception is me adding to the DC-4 package my speedometer gauge in kt reading because I always use kt, not mph when flying.
Regards,
Aharon