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Please see the most recent updates in the "Where did the .com name go?" thread. Posts number 16 and 17.
This I don't quite understand. As I'm coming in on a long straight in approach, with AOA, glide slope, and air speed nailed, as I cross the runway threshold, I have to do something different, unless I want to land like a NAVY plane, which, I must admit, seems to be hard-wired into my brain...Paul your issue is not losing speed in the final seconds, it is NOT losing speed. Look at picture #3. You are still at 170Kts, ten feet off the ground and stalling her to get down.
Here is how I was taught to land. Padre Bill quoted you from the more recent version of the bible. Here is the OLD testament version that was taught when I flew. It is also how we landed the F-4.
You calculate landing and approach speeds as a cross check. However, if you set the proper AOA with pitch (control stick) and get the donut, you will be on the correct speed.
Aim just short of the runway's edge and use the throttles to get there. Speed (AOA ) is done with the pitch and the glide slope is set with the throttles. If you see yourself getting low (too many red) add power. If you are high (too many white) reduce power. This way, you have only one control to worry about, the throttles.
Your goal is to land in the first 1000 feet of runway. So as you reach the overrun, raise you aim point about 200-300 feet down the runway and slowly pull power, hold your attitude or verrrryyyy slight pull back on the stick a smidgen .
The jet's nose will naturally pitch up and flatten out the approach, lose speed and settle on the runway. If you get the red chevron let the stick go forward to green. Don't worry about landing long. Once you get the picture you will start landing within the 1000 feet.
If you haven't already done so, watch the video I made on landing. Look at the gauges to see when I start reducing power and what AOA I am holding. You will see the jet's approach flatten out at the end.
If it makes you feel any better, I had hell landing this thing at first. I kept dropping too fast in the final turn and had to add power and go around.
I just spent most of yesterday and today working on the T-38A's performance in MultiPlayer. The only thing I still have to work on is getting the Afterburner system to behave itself.The point is not whether Milviz T-38 is a good model or not, it surely is, the point is that it is not complete without the multiplayer and that it was not declared before to be released to public, someone may have been induced to buy the model to fly it in multiplayer and had a nasty surprise.
/Mario
Paul:
The amount of flare needed is small, For me not reducing the power till the wheels are almost on the runway seems to help, the combination of power reduction and increased AOA tends to make for a firm impact at best and an airplane shaped hole at worst. An early flair also seems to exacerbate the energy loss.
Good Luck! T
I just spent most of yesterday and today working on the T-38A's performance in MultiPlayer. The only thing I still have to work on is getting the Afterburner system to behave itself.
Here is a log of my eighteen minute session on FS-MP's Server. Note the first line boxed in orange. I tested every switch and knob to make certain everything was still working, and that nothing "flooded the server..."
I'm very, very pleased with the result. Note that the performance is actually just a little bit better than the default 737-800...![]()
Good job n4gix, we have met several time on fsdeveloper and your suggestions to me have been constantly outstanding.I just spent most of yesterday and today working on the T-38A's performance in MultiPlayer. The only thing I still have to work on is getting the Afterburner system to behave itself.
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P.s.: i'm still not a T-38 user.
Yep, this about sums up my experience, more or less, up to now...Still, if you want to kiss the runway at anything close to the correct AOA, you can't do it at anything less than the correct approach speed, in most cases, around 170 knots. I can land fine at 150 knots (sort of) but I touch the runway with the mains and the nose way up in the air...