Many of you asked for an encore article to "Back to Basics: Formation Flying." What better way to celebrate formation flying than to emmulate the reknowned USAF Thunderbirds with Microprose's Falcon 4.0?
As a follow up, I decided to take Formation Flying to its highest level of
expression: precision flying. Falcon 4.0 has the "Tbird" beautifully rendered in
the DOGFIGHT module. This gave me the perfect opportunity to fly in the virtual
skies as a member of the Thunderbirds. Compare for yourself this real picture
of the Thunderbirds in action versus the Viper in its Falcon 4.0 dress blues.
The Real Thing.
Until you try to fly with the precision that the real Thunderbirds do inside
a flight sim, you can't really appreciate just how much skill and concentration
these experts possess. The big difference is they can't hit the restart
game button if they mess up.
Only the very best pilots become the Thunderbirds
and then only for a few years. I've watched the Navy's equivalent, the
Blue Angels, for years out here in Southern California. In fact, once both
the Thunderbirds and Blue Angels shared cockpits, and each obviously had the highest respect for the other.
While I find online dogfighting a great challenge, there is another
side to both real and virtual flying that separates the hobby flier
from the enthusiast: the discipline facet. There is a small group of
virtual pilots that strive to do everything "by the book". By that I
mean they are precise on how they
plan a flight, taxi, communicate, take off, fly, land and even park.
They do
this whether or not they are on a combat mission or just flying
recreationally.
To qoute the "TopGun" movie: "I like that in a pilot".
It's this mental attitude that mind melds the sim to the
virtual pilot. I believe
discipline has as much to do with the immersion factor as does the
production values of the sim itself. Throw a great sim into the
equation, and you have the makings of what we all long for in flight
simming: that "being there" experience.
There are many good sims out there that will get you there. My personal
choices are Falcon4.0, Su27 Flanker, European Air War, GSC Hornet,
Janes F15 and LongBow2. But when it comes to looking the part, nothing
gets you closer to being a Thunderbird than does Falcon 4.0.
Once
you get into Falcon4.0's Dogfight module, you can select the USA team.
This
will get you into the T'bird Viper F16. You can then either add an AI
wingie
or bring along some steady handed friends with good online
connectivity. In Falcon 4.0's v1.06 release, you can only really get a
total of 2 players stable online.
As for the AI wingies, unfortunately the wingman commands in
the dogfight module are not active such that you could call your
wingies to join up. So the best you can really do is a flight
of two. The exception would be a total of three if you form up on an AI
wingie and one
other human wingie were to join. Word is that the multiplayer patch
that will be part of 1.07 in the next few weeks will allow us to really
get the full four and five ship T'bird formations working online.
With a two ship T'bird virtual airshow, you can have a lot of fun. The
pictures you see
in this article are a combination of offline and online multiplayer. If
you have a really
good connection (or cable!) you can get almost as close to the other
ship as you can in offline play. Typically, in online play there is a
warping effect that makes close formation even more challenging. There
is a "hit bubble" around the planes so you really can't get any closer
than what appears to be three or four virtual feet from the other ship.
This is true whether online or not.
The real T'birds fly within 18 inches of each other at times. On the other hand,
they have a lot more senses and communications available to them to aid in the coordination of
the formation. The real T'birds also get to fly without the warp effect that plagues the virtual
world. So as far as I see it, if you can get within a wing's length of
the other ship and hold that position - you're doing great.
Snapping pictures is also a great challenge in the virtual world. You
don't have chase planes
to document your airshow. To complicate matters, there's no way to
pause or freeze the action when online in DogFight mode. You can pause
in TE missions, but until we see add on skin programs (maybe in patch
1.07?) we have to make do. You could use the ACMI, but the picture
quality would be horrible.
Ed. Note: There is an autocapture feature in Hypersnap DX that would likely work very well for the purpose of airshow filming...
In order to become proficient at precision formation flying you need
discipline, planning, communication, practice and an artistic eye for
aerial ballet.
Typically what I do is first practice chasing AI planes around, whether
they are enemy migs or friendlies. You can see in the picture below
where my T'bird is forming on the wing of a Mig29. I guess you could
consider me one of the famous Mig Insulters. The tricky part is
sneaking up to them without first getting blown away.
The online pictures you see that are from the ship's exterior (like the 2 ships trailing smoke),
are ones I took from outside the cockpit. This should give you an idea of the
complexity that goes into making these screen shots. I regularly
use the pictures on my website and as my Win95 background. The PRINTSCREEN key acts as an
in game screen capture. You then can convert this RAW format into any other format
you wish using Paint Shop Pro or whatever you can get your hands on.
T bird pulling Gs
Sun Glare
I dont think the real T'birds use this as a learning tool, but radar
really helps! Once you lock up the ship you're following your radar and
HUD should display the relative speeds, which makes following easier.
Once you're within
a plane's length pick out a visual reference point. Line up the
wingie's wing tip relative to your HUD, instrument cowl or your wing
tip. Then try to keep that distance constant. Obviously, if the
wingie/leader flies straight, level and at a constant speed your job
will be much easier. The fun begins when
your wingie is turning. This is the point where formation flying and
dogfighting skills merge.
To sum it all up, virtual precision formation flying is both
fun and challenging. Falcon 4.0
provides all you need to get the job done, and looking pretty. It's my
opinion that by practicing your formation skills to an art form, you
are at the same time honing in your close quarters dogfighting
capabilities. This holds true whether it be jets, props or rotors that
you are flying.
Formation in Combat
The ability to stay in the "saddle" or "elbow" or "guns position" is directly related to your
ability to fly with precision and patience. It's my hope that this article will incite
many of you out there to fall in love with formation flying as I have, and perhaps even create
virtual precision flying squadrons in honor of those that we inspire to immitate. At least we
can all have "fun fun fun 'till daddy takes the T'bird away" (Beach Boys).