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Chuck_Jodry-VJPL
June 6th, 2009, 14:30
Now in its first day of Beta Tests , its the Jet Pilots turn to Super Cruise , this Babe is capable of emitting a Sonic Boom climbing nearly vertically.<?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" /><o:p></o:p>
To the edge of space in 2 minutes flat , i had a riot last night putting it through its paces in multiplayer, good thing its got Auto flaps and Spoilers because it was not easy staying within the speed limits , i do believe i need to be over the Atlantic next time so ATC isn’t as perturbed .
<o:p></o:p>

Quicksand
June 6th, 2009, 15:14
Awesome!!!!:gameon:

VFR Reviews
June 6th, 2009, 18:05
Oooh, it's perty mate :D

Do you know who I could get in touch with to review it?

MudMarine
June 6th, 2009, 21:46
That bird spanks the envelope!!

tigisfat
June 6th, 2009, 22:51
I hope this won't be another aircraft with a 'fantasy' set of flight dynamics which 'felt right' to the developer. Such is the stuff that cartoony addons are made of. Suckers like me buy these kinds of things following the advertising that "the flight dynamics were researched thoroughly and are completely accurate". Anyway, that looks awesome!!!:ernae:

centuryseries
June 7th, 2009, 03:02
I hope this won't be another aircraft with a 'fantasy' set of flight dynamics which 'felt right' to the developer. Such is the stuff that cartoony addons are made of. Suckers like me buy these kinds of things following the advertising that "the flight dynamics were researched thoroughly and are completely accurate". Anyway, that looks awesome!!!:ernae:
Looks good!

2 minutes to the edge of space is a bit worrying lol

Chuck_Jodry-VJPL
June 7th, 2009, 04:47
1,650 MPH or M2.2 Equals a blistering 145,200 feet per minute.

The FDE produced by Steve Small author of many .air files and a Pilot himself is being Beta Tested in this preliminary round by a limited number of testers , all chosen because they have experience with jet aircraft.

This aircraft during its assessment was so fast that the chase planes had trouble keeping up , we were fortunate to have the declassified operating manual to refer to and a wealth of video records to use as a basis for the duplication of the "Fly By Wire" control surfaces .

As an added touch we made sure that the animations were compatible with Multiplayer and FS Recorder so that those who use this aircraft and our productions as a rule will have the opportunity to join their friends online and not be looking at a static aircraft.

Once the documentation is assembled for operating the FMC and Avionics i planned to invite a number of members of SOH to join in the Beta Tests for some additional feedback , i will add VFR Reviews to the list.

MudMarine
June 7th, 2009, 08:02
No matter what some "experts" won't be happy. Because we all know flight simming is perfectly real......hehe:engel016:

VFR Reviews
June 7th, 2009, 10:20
Cool mate, thanks!

I love fighter jets, and there's so few being made for the simulator, so I'm always interested :engel016:

Always loved the F-23 since I first saw it in Ace Combat :p

Sundog
June 7th, 2009, 10:44
ummm, just because an aircraft can achieve M2.2, it doesn't mean it can do it at all altitudes. In fact, the engines would have flamed out long before it reached anywhere near 145,000 ft and then it wouldn't have enough aerodynamic control power to maintain control.

Having said that, I usually expect to have to rework FDE's for any high performance aircraft I buy anyway, since most have very poor ROC modeling, usually WAY overdone and usually have too much acceleration. Although, I don't entirely blame them as accurate information regarding those aspects of an aircrafts performance are difficult to come by, especially a good engine deck.

Although, to me, it looks like this model has the production models (F-23) nose on the prototypes (YF-23) body. Still a great looking aircraft, though, and the modeling is well done.

3/7charlie
June 7th, 2009, 10:51
Some folks say there's a demon living right out there at the edge of the envelope, and I aim to grab him right by the tail!

She looks nice!

Navy Chief
June 7th, 2009, 10:58
Now in its first day of Beta Tests , its the Jet Pilots turn to Super Cruise , this Babe is capable of emitting a Sonic Boom climbing nearly vertically.<?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" /><o:p></o:p>
To the edge of space in 2 minutes flat , i had a riot last night putting it through its paces in multiplayer, good thing its got Auto flaps and Spoilers because it was not easy staying within the speed limits , i do believe i need to be over the Atlantic next time so ATC isn’t as perturbed .
<o:p></o:p>

In your screenshot, it looks like some type of formation lights on the aft section. Or is that a just a glitch in the screenshot?

NC

AckAck
June 7th, 2009, 11:11
Looks to me like just really bright white tailcodes and shield...

Brian

krazycolin
June 7th, 2009, 12:41
There are indeed two red formation lights on the aft section and a nav lights on the main "pod" top and bottom, just as there are on the real plane. (see attached pic)

I've never seen pictures or "real" drawings of the "production" version of the YF-23 as it never existed so the nose is modeled as per the real one. The exterior model is as exact as the YF-23 can be. We used a ton of pics to model it and we actually went to the Western Museum of Flight in CA and took actual measurements before it was shipped off for "refurb" at NG. The only difference between ours and the real thing in terms of the exterior are the two weapons bays when there is only one on the real and the gun bay. Both of these are non-functional in this release, perhaps to be "activated" in an addon along with the other weapons systems if we should decide to do an "as if" version... i.e. F/A-23.

If you have actual visual reference of a "real" production version of the YF-23, I would be glad to see it. If, however, you are referring to someone's "pretend" version and any and all 3 views out there are not the net... well.. what can I say? This is real and that's all imagined and, unfortunately, has no basis in reality. I know. I checked.

I point you to a website with lots of very nice pics that you may use as a reference to compare.

http://aircraftwalkaround.hobbyvista.com/yf-23/yf-23.htm

Paul Metz, after the first flight where the gear was pulled up, was actually quoted as saying to the effect of "I was bit scared at just how fast the plane accelerated after initial rotation..." In the event, the two F-16 chase planes had to apply burner to catchup and keep up. Paul hadn't even gone to full military power. That's pretty darned good acceleration.

Thanks,

kc.

Chuck_Jodry-VJPL
June 7th, 2009, 13:02
"Looks to me like just really bright white tailcodes and shield..."

And thats what you see there , I only had the slime lights on dim at the time and they are recessed into the wings.
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Brian_Gladden
June 7th, 2009, 13:22
Does it have the wingtip vortex from just the left wing every time the airplane turns or changes pitch? That was one of the reason's the AF didn't go for the YF-23. Any G loading, even less than 2G would produce a very visible white vortex from the left tip. Northrup couldn't make it go away.

The YF-23 was slicker, aerodynamically, had better stealth but the YF-22 could out turn it all day.

Brian

krazycolin
June 7th, 2009, 13:44
Weird... I just looked at three different videos of the YF-23 in flight and pulling g's and it wasn't showing any kind of vortex either left or right wing. Not disputing that but... i can't see it. Never read or heard about that one either.

fliger747
June 7th, 2009, 22:29
Vortices are usually displayed in humid climates and not much at all in dry ones.

I had a chance to test this plane at my secret location on Midway Atoll (Joe B said it was OK to just hint at the location like this) and did a nice zoom climb to 71,200', where it pretty much runs out of poop, as one might expect. As typical with fly by wire systems, it lands fairly easily and has good manners. With the tremendous thrust available, some thrust lever deftness is required to maintain a stable approach speed!

Piglet
June 7th, 2009, 22:34
No matter how much you push the envelope, it remains stationery!

gajit
June 7th, 2009, 23:18
No matter how much you push the envelope, it remains stationery!

:icon_lol::jump::ernae:

3/7charlie
June 8th, 2009, 09:01
No matter how much you push the envelope, it remains stationery!

The problem with the inevitable is, it allways happens!


The real reason Lockmart got the F-22 was politics. As Sir Sidney
noted of the TSR.2....Airplanes have 4 dimensions. Length, width, height, and politics.
The TSR.2 only had the first 3 right! Northrop was producing the Beak. Lockmart gets the F-22.
The thing that speaks volumes about the respective designs is the massive re-design Lockmart
undertook between the YF-22 and the F-22A. Except for a slight familly resembelance, the F-22 is a totaly
new aircraft, requiring total re-design to reduce weight, drag, improve its 'low observable'
features, and put some 'growth' back into the aircraft. The YF-23 was very much the production aircraft,
except for being 'hand rolled', having much lower drag,more "growth' built in, better suvivability,
, higher sustained cruise at lower power settings, superior L-O performance ( all aspect 'stealth',
lower IR signature) and better tran-sonic acceleration, but some what less high alpha and turn performance
than the YF-22; which is arguably of less importance in modern air combat. There was also the perception that
the YF-23 looked ' too radical ', the YF-22 looked more like the F-15. This is not as strange as it sounds.
When North American showed the YA3J mock-up to the navy, it featured twin vertical fins, ala F-14, to acheive
the required stability with out the penalty of a huge, tall fin with folding to get it in the hangar. BuAir felt
this just looked too radical, so,the big, heavy, folding fin with all kinds of aero-elasctic hassles comes back.
And, lets face it. The YF-23 is the hornier looking aircraft. Oh, yes, I am going to attract all kinds of fire now,
as there is a culture around the F-22 that reminds me of the mid '70's, when a young AirForce officer could
seriously damage his career by showing any interest in that 'cheaper, inferior' product from Ft.Worth!
Great looking model. I'm looking forward to straping it to my ass and punching some holes in the sky!
Now a 'mortar magnet'
3/7charlie

Sundog
June 8th, 2009, 10:11
You can see a drawing of the production version of the F-23 here (http://www.secretprojects.co.uk/forum/index.php/topic,1092.390.html). There's a larger version on page 28 for download. The main changes are the forward fuselage cross section, the chine isn't as pronounced as it was on the prototype, the longer forward fuselage, so it can have two missle bays in tandem, instead of one deep one; Sidewinders in the fwd bay, AMRAAM's in the rear bay. It has stealthy half shock cone inlets instead of the trapezoidal inlets and the main landing gear is no longer a trailing link set-up. The engine nacelles are moved in closer to each other and toe-ed in at the rear and shortened in length, since the prototypes nacelles were made long enough to fit a thrust reverser, which was removed from the requirements. You can also see where the IRST was to be placed under the nose. I also thought it was interesting that the in-flight refueling receptacle was moved to the forward portion of the left nacelle.

This drawing has been around for awhile, but it's the first I've seen it publicly posted.

3/7charlie
June 8th, 2009, 10:22
Well shut my blinkin mouf! Never seen that one before. You would think that some changes would be made, airforces being fond of constantly changing requirements. Still doesn't seem quite as drastic as Lockmarts massaging of the F-22.

3/7charlie.

centuryseries
June 8th, 2009, 10:37
Does the model go at Mach 2 at sea level? Please say no lol :pop4:

tigisfat
June 8th, 2009, 10:47
Oh, yes, I am going to attract all kinds of fire now,
as there is a culture around the F-22 that reminds me of the mid '70's, when a young AirForce officer could
seriously damage his career by showing any interest in that 'cheaper, inferior' product from Ft.Worth!
Good sir, you've hit the nail on the head. I've been arguing that side of things for years now. More money does not always equal more capability. Have you ever noticed that certain politicians and military leaders even feel like their hands are tied from time to time? It took no time for certain relieved military leaders to voice support for the cancellation of the F-22 production line.

krazycolin
June 8th, 2009, 11:58
You can see a drawing of the production version of the F-23 here (http://www.secretprojects.co.uk/forum/index.php/topic,1092.390.html). There's a larger version on page 28 for download. The main changes are the forward fuselage cross section, the chine isn't as pronounced as it was on the prototype, the longer forward fuselage, so it can have two missle bays in tandem, instead of one deep one; Sidewinders in the fwd bay, AMRAAM's in the rear bay. It has stealthy half shock cone inlets instead of the trapezoidal inlets and the main landing gear is no longer a trailing link set-up. The engine nacelles are moved in closer to each other and toe-ed in at the rear and shortened in length, since the prototypes nacelles were made long enough to fit a thrust reverser, which was removed from the requirements. You can also see where the IRST was to be placed under the nose. I also thought it was interesting that the in-flight refueling receptacle was moved to the forward portion of the left nacelle.

This drawing has been around for awhile, but it's the first I've seen it publicly posted.

Ah yes... the drawing by Matej. Unfortunately, I believe that is mere fiction.I don't think it's real and almost certainly not anything endorsed by nor designed by NG. Note that there is nowhere on that piece of paper the name of the company. Nowhere. Now, having worked with both Lockmart and with Northrop Grumman on two different projects (LCS and F-35) and having had drawings of theirs in my actual possession, I can tell you right away that all of their drawings are clearly marked as theirs. I do see, however, the names Sandusky and Mendoza. At the least, those are correct. However, that drawing, and yes, I've seen it before, is not an F-23A nor is it a YF-23. It's neither. I'm not even sure that it's real and I will stand by that.

krazycolin
June 8th, 2009, 12:25
Oh, and I did ask... and the answer I got was "kermfuffle..." which I took to mean no. I will not say to whom I spoke to on the team but his name is indeed on that drawing...

krazycolin
June 8th, 2009, 12:49
I should say that we did one thing on that drawing and that is to add the second weapons bay. It will remain inactive until/unless we do an addon for the "if it only were" crowd...

deathfromafar
June 8th, 2009, 12:51
Good sir, you've hit the nail on the head. I've been arguing that side of things for years now. More money does not always equal more capability. Have you ever noticed that certain politicians and military leaders even feel like their hands are tied from time to time? It took no time for certain relieved military leaders to voice support for the cancellation of the F-22 production line.

Yeap, good ole "Warfighters Politico-isms". Same was said of the F-15 and that it was too expensive and would never meet the demands of it's design criteria. We came within a arms hair of never having the Eagle. Same of the F-111 even once it's original McNamara TFX pipe dream was out of the window. Similar rumblings against the B-1 and B-2. "Useless Golden Egg Layer's", overpriced white elephants which would fail in combat. Same said of the AH-64 and M-1A1 Abrams. Seems in most all those cases, the nay-sayers were proven wrong in due time. The F-22 will get it's day the same and I wager that 188 won't be the final number of them when all is said and done. Sadly, maybe the real winner in the AFT competition lost as is often the case in these matters. Glad to see someone loves the YF-23 besides me. Hope to have this in my sim very soon!

3/7charlie
June 8th, 2009, 13:21
Good sir, you've hit the nail on the head. I've been arguing that side of things for years now. More money does not always equal more capability. Have you ever noticed that certain politicians and military leaders even feel like their hands are tied from time to time? It took no time for certain relieved military leaders to voice support for the cancellation of the F-22 production line.

Nothing is more political than military procurement. What I have found shocking about Aircraft procurement, beyond obstipiated, bloated plutocrats with no technical or military backgrounds who are all experts dictating terms based on who makes the largest 'campaign contribution',
is the massive amounts of effort and money put into endless deffinition studies, requirement studies, technology validation studies, feasability studies,- my favorite - viability studies( viable? is it alive and capable of reproducing?) RFP's. Court actions over who gets the RFP. My god!
If I bought groceries that way, I'd have starved to death 28 years ago.
I could weep when I watch the waste! They will spend 10 times or more
of the actual cost studying the damned thing than they would have if they just swung blind and built it!I could cite the nightmare of misery that the Canadian taxpayer has gone through for the past 30 years trying to replace the seathing. Study, define, study more, pick the machine that meets requirements, have bounced out because it doesn't meet political requirements. Study more. Finally award contract. upgrade Seathings. Cancell contract. Go to court. Pay huge Penalties. Study more. Upgrade Seathings again. And again. Aircrew die. Study more. Award another contract. Go to court. Upgrade Seathings again. We have spent enough money up here to buy 100 EH101's, 20 Chinooks, replace all of our Tribal class Destroyers, And still have not taken delivery of a single aircraft. And now, 30+ years after starting to look for a Seathing replacement (1978-1979!) The S-92 is late, probably overweight, and was out of growth even before it got off the drawing board. And we'll have to do a massive upgrade on the Seathing again. Too many nabobs! And frankly, too many 'information specialists' and ' software engineers' trying to design Airplanes. The auto makers have this illness, too. You can put all the I-pod docking ports you want in it, its still the same antiquated, Victorian, inefficant gas guzzler under all the satnav and entertainment centers.How much money has the DOD spent between 1989 and now, how many missmanaged projects, to get 2 combat types into service? And one of them is the F-18 that should have been produced in 1985. The F-22. Nice jet. too expensive, and the BS first person shooter mentality of the US military means that junior jet man is going to wade into a mess of cheap J-10'S, loose situational awareness, and get his 3/4 billion dollar jet blown away by a $60.000 python copy, instead of useing the airplanes strenghts(sensors, data fusion, BVR combat) All ready happened at RED FLAG last year. Zapped by an agresssor in a knife fight. The only thing that may save all of our asses is that the PLA is glacially slow to change doctrine. But that won't last for ever. Numbers wont carry the day, but neither will silver bullets. Kelly Johnson knew how to run a progam. Stay Small, Stay Quiet. Be Fast. Stay close to the Machine. A small , tight team, small enough to comunicate with it self. work fast and quiet so that the grease machine doesn't get a chance start bloating and eating the budget. Every body works on the shop floor so you dont loose sight of what you're doing, meetings dont drag on for months, communication lines are short. And dont re-invent the wheel if you can buy one down the street that will work. Those guys worked miracles on budgets and timelines that would'nt get coffee and donuts on the table at Lockheed nowadays.
3/7charlie

deathfromafar
June 8th, 2009, 14:06
Ah yes, the almighty checks and balance system to avoid $200 toilet seats and $500 claw hammers being procured by the DOD only to have created an even more bloated and wasteful system. Wasteful waste watchers not being watched themselves. Where does the madness end? The prediction of the combined services being able to only afford a single aircraft & helicopter between themselves. You hit one nail on the head perfectly. A far less expensive system being able to take out a far more expensive system. Is like the Anti-Tank Missile or Mine that costs little compared to a $50 Million piece of steel. But still the tank wasn't rendered obsolete, just a change of tactics/training, and systems MSIP upgrades based on good Intelligence of what countermeasures your best systems may be facing to turn the tables back towards your side of the battle. Is the way things have always worked in the evolution of weaponry and tactics. The F-16 vs Raptor kill was the buzz when it happened which seems to overlook the fact of the lopsided DACT kill ratios the Raptor has been piling up. It's true worth will only be truly known when it is needed in actual combat. Personnally, I would prefer to see the original middle number built over time in M/LRP output and see it's mission expanded either from it's current form or maybe a more multi-role version in time. Maybe cut back drastically on the F-35 in favor of spliting duties with newly bought F-16 Block 60's and F-15SE's all updated with various capabilities you mention above just to name a few. Makes sense to me. As to pitting the Raptor against the J-10, if we threw just 94 or half of the built Raptors at a sky full of J-10's using AIM-120C's alone, that is roughly 564 (or less counting the miss probabilities) dead J-10's from way the hell out of the J-10's reach. If you count the AIM-9X, that's 188 more bring the possible kill total to 752. I'll take anything even somewhat near that capability any day! That will likely never be seen in our lifetime(We hope and pray never). 3/4's of it would be done by knocking out the enemy aircract and airfields early on before they ever become a credible air to air threat.

I also agree if KJ was still around, things would be very different and Raptors would be delivered at far lower in cost and we would likely see more capability as well.
Days long gone.

3/7charlie
June 8th, 2009, 14:24
Dont get me wrong.The F-22 has proven overwhelming in exersise, with the redforce having to resort to tactics right off the map. The F-22 driver in question did kill six aggressors before he got zapped, by getting his fangs out and getting too close. It has also been a bit embarassing when the whole avionics pakage in four(?) aircraft crash when crossing the international dateline. Good thing they had some tanker pukes along to navigate then back to Hawaii! But I stand by my assesment of flawed doctrine and over-reliance on the silver-bullet. I dont think the AF will get a hiding fron the PLA. That'll be the Navy that gets it when a couple of CBG's get hammered in the first day by nuclear missile strikes. I hope that they are wrong about the limited ability of IR/ICBM's with pretty accurate terminal guidance to hit targets at sea. But I am not so confident of their abillity to counter a saturation strike by, oh, 40 or 50 SUNBURN 200kt mach 3.5 seaskimmers. The weapons are rarely ever that flawed. Doctrine is what will kill you.
I hope to hell I'm wrong.
3/7charlie

Sundog
June 8th, 2009, 16:35
Ah yes... the drawing by Matej. Unfortunately, I believe that is mere fiction.I don't think it's real and almost certainly not anything endorsed by nor designed by NG. Note that there is nowhere on that piece of paper the name of the company. Nowhere. Now, having worked with both Lockmart and with Northrop Grumman on two different projects (LCS and F-35) and having had drawings of theirs in my actual possession, I can tell you right away that all of their drawings are clearly marked as theirs. I do see, however, the names Sandusky and Mendoza. At the least, those are correct. However, that drawing, and yes, I've seen it before, is not an F-23A nor is it a YF-23. It's neither. I'm not even sure that it's real and I will stand by that.

I'll stand with the word of the people I know in the industry and that drawing isn't from Matej, although I understand he also possesses it. Not to mention, he would get into alot of trouble using the F-23 team logo without permission and the designers names. I've seen Matej's drawings and he isn't capable of making a drawing like that and I had no idea he knew how to make area distribution plots. I've found few online who know how to accurately calculate them.

I should also point out that I possess many aircraft drawings that don't have the company's name on them and saw many of them in school that didn't have the companies name on them.

krazycolin
June 8th, 2009, 17:09
I think it's a nice drawing no matter where it comes from. Even if it is real it really doesn't matter.

Our plane, however, isn't based on that or any other drawing but rather on the actual existing plane that we took measurements and pictures of. If you find that it's wrong in anyway other than those previously stated (gun bay and dual missile bays) please provide photographic evidence and we will fix it. Otherwise, I think we should drop this.

It's not that I'm saying anything bad about you or your sources, merely that we've not based our model off of that drawing. I did see it before I started this project more than 4 years ago but, I knew at once that it wasn't the correct plane.

kc.

OBIO
June 8th, 2009, 19:57
And once again, an ongoing debate over the accuracy of a 3D animated cartoon representation of a real life airplane.

IT'S A FREAKING 3D ANIMATED CARTOON! Not a real aircraft! Close enough is good enough. If every 3D ANIMATED CARTOON AIRPLANE had to be 100% accurate in appearance and performance, there would not be a single aircraft, helicopter, space ship, boat, submarine, lawn mower, uni-cycle or flying broom available for any flight sim.

Relax, take a deep breath, and repeat after me:

IT'S A 3D ANIMATED CARTOON, IT'S A 3D ANIMATED CARTOON, IT'S A 3D ANIMATED CARTOON.

OBIO

krazycolin
June 8th, 2009, 21:10
Lol....