#4381903 - 09/28/17 04:56 PM
Experience over Time
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Joined: Jul 2014
Posts: 907
Nietzsche
Member
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Member
Joined: Jul 2014
Posts: 907
Grevenbroich, Germany
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Hi again. The Thread "Is Woff dead?" was a nice Push (for me) to write a bit...
I'd like to talk about the Survival-Rate, here, and how the Time you've spent in the Cockpit affects it. Interestingly, I thought after a Year or two: Hey, I know how Things work. Nevertheless, my Pilots rarely survied 60 Missions or more. I kept wondering, why, and did not find any sufficient answers. My Combat-Abilities were pretty good, and had not really improved since. Also, my Awareness was okay. Meanwhile I was astonished about the Fact, that most of my Pilots now have survived more than 200 Missions, and I don't expect them to be shot to Pieces or Crash-Land within the next few Missions or so. I wondered, why... I think, the Learning-Curve for Woff is even larger than we already have expected. Personally, I fly Woff for roundabout 5 or 6 Years now, and I think, the Survival-Rate mainly climbs up, because one gets better in evaluating Risks. What do you think?
Greetz, Nietzsche
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#4381906 - 09/28/17 05:26 PM
Re: Experience over Time
[Re: Nietzsche]
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Joined: Dec 2012
Posts: 3,086
MFair
Senior Member
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Senior Member
Joined: Dec 2012
Posts: 3,086
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Nietzsche, I would agree completely. I used to marvel at pilots with longevity, yours included in the DID campaigns. My experience was much the same as yours before. By listening to you and other "good" sim pilots maybe I have put it all together as I now have a pilot with over 100 hrs.
My tactics borrowed from others in a nutshell are: Forget about kills. If you live long enough you will have plenty. A dead pilot makes no kills. Stay out of fur balls. Too much risk of collision. Don't follow an enemy down low unless over your own territory. And, don't follow him down if he can dive better than you unless you want your wings torn off. When outnumbered, try to damage one when you can and then go to someone else. One less to deal with. Always look for an exit. Along with this, if you see it in time, run, don't get outnumbered in the first place. If an HA in your squad is bound and determined to horn in on your kill, let him have it. Again, collision risk. If your wingman or a squad mate does something stupid, let him pay for his own mistakes. I will go into a tough situation to help one but if he wants to chase planes over the lines low, it's his funeral. Not mine.
It is hard to give up a kill when it is "right there" but if the odds are not there, let it go. it just is not worth it.
I think you hit the nail on the head. As should be obvious, all the above deal with evaluating risk. Good post Bud!
Last edited by MFair; 09/28/17 05:28 PM.
Never approach a bull from the front, a horse from the rear or a fool from either end. BOC Member since....I can't remember!
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#4381911 - 09/28/17 06:05 PM
Re: Experience over Time
[Re: Nietzsche]
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Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 7,993
Robert_Wiggins
BWOC Survivor!...So Far!!
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BWOC Survivor!...So Far!!
Hotshot
Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 7,993
Lindsay, Ontario, Canada
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Well Said MFair and Nietzsche. It's all sound logic but it is only as good as your ability to apply it. I think the key to this is to get all the gung ho killing out of your way in QC and short term missions before starting into DiD. Staying cool is the key.
Case: Cooler Master Storm Trooper PSU: Ultra X3,1000-Watt MB: Asus Maximus VI Extreme Mem: Corsair Vengeance (2x 8GB), PC3-12800, DDR3-1600MHz, Unbuffered CPU: Intel i7-4770K, OC to 4.427Ghz CPU Cooler: Cooler Master Seidon 240M Liquid CPU Cooler Vid Card: ASUS GTX 980Ti STRIX 6GB OS and Games on separate: Samsung 840 Series 250GB SSD Monitor: Primary ASUS PG27AQ 4k; Secondary Samsung SyncMaster BX2450L Periphs: MS Sidewinder FFB2 Pro, TrackIR 4
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#4381937 - 09/28/17 08:27 PM
Re: Experience over Time
[Re: Nietzsche]
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Joined: Nov 2014
Posts: 3,696
Fullofit
Senior Member
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Senior Member
Joined: Nov 2014
Posts: 3,696
Ajax, ON
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For me, reduction in fence lethality is probably the biggest contributing factor to my pilot’s survival.
"Take the cylinder out of my kidneys, The connecting rod out of my brain, my brain, From out of my arse take the camshaft, And assemble the engine again."
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#4382039 - 09/29/17 10:53 AM
Re: Experience over Time
[Re: Nietzsche]
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Joined: Oct 2011
Posts: 740
Ace_Pilto
Livestreamer/YouTuber
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Livestreamer/YouTuber
Member
Joined: Oct 2011
Posts: 740
Sector ZZ9 Plural Z Alpha
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Lack of patience and boredom will always get you in the end if you don't master them. That's my experience so far.
Let's pretend I got the BWOC badge to embed here.
Wenn ihr sieg im deine Kampf selbst gegen, wirst stark wie Stahl sein. "The best techniques are passed on by the survivors." - Gaiden Shinji
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