The Camel seems a lot more stable than I thought she's be. Nice flying. I'll be purchasing both planes.
From the video it does look like an incredibly stable, highly maneuverable bird with a splendid roll rate and decent speed to boost.
This is going to be one popular ride.
Maybe a bit too popular to Central flyers' liking.
I hope it is just Jason's great flying that makes it look easy! The Camel was notorious for being just as deadly to its pilots as it was to its enemies. Everything and I mean everything I read said it was vicious in a right hand turn and required almost full left rudder and a lot of concentration in a right turn or it would lose control.
So I sincerely hope Neoqb have not dumbed down the FM.
From the following link.
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3897/is_199808/ai_n8823870/?tag=content;col1
"A right turn is an entirely different and somewhat disconcerting maneuver. Keeping the engine at 1,200rpm and with 120mph airspeed, I bank to the right, wind hitting hard against my left cheek. With the left side of the rudder bar almost fully deflected and my right knee jammed back almost to the seat, I am barely able to maintain a 30-degree bank to the right without the bank increasing. It is not a smooth right turn in any sense of the word. It takes a lot of concentration and a delicate touch with my feet on the rudder bar to maintain the constant angle of bank for the entire 360 degrees of the turn. In reality, it probably took less time to make the 360-degree right turn, but it was fatiguing and seemed to take forever to get back on my original heading."
From the following link
http://www.theaerodrome.com/aircraft/gbritain/sopwith_camel.php"A great number of trainee pilots had been killed learning to fly this machine, as its tricks took some learning, although they were really simple to overcome. Its main trouble was that owing to its very small wingspan, and its purposely unstable characteristics, coupled with the gyroscopic effect of a rotating engine and propeller, it flipped into a spin very easily at low speeds. Consequently, in landing and taking off, a tremendous number of fatal accidents occurred, and a general felling of dislike for the machine was prevalent. It really had people frightened." Arthur Cobby
From Flying the Old Planes, by Frank Tallman, 1973
"Turns are what the Camel is all about. Turning to the right with the torque requires the top rudder to hold the nose up, and the speed with which you can complete a 360-degree turn is breathtaking. Left turns are slower, with the nose wanting to rise during the turn. But small rudder input easily keeps the nose level with the horizon. In stalls at 35 to 40 mph the nose drops frighteningly fast and hard to the right, but you also get control back quickly, although a surprising amount of altitude has been lost. I have had the pleasure of limited dog fighting with other WWI fighters, and there are none that can stay with a Camel in a turn."