Comments by "Solo Renegade" (@SoloRenegade) on "PeriscopeFilm"
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@texaswunderkind My first time in combat, we were deployed, without knowing what the vehicles we'd be using looked like, and with no formalized nor successful tactics yet devised for the job we were tasked with doing. We had to figure it out on the fly and make it up as we went. Units we replaced were suffering up to 30% casualties. My company deployed 20 men short at only 100 men, and we lost only 1 in combat, and 3 others injured enough to be sent home. We figured it out and became top experts at what we did. But we had a rather unique unit and group of guys. It was a perfect storm of the right people in the right place with the right leadership to figure it out.
The military signed huge contracts for the vehicles we used after that deployment, and many modifications we made to them are still being used, and many of the tactics we came up with became common practice across the military.
Success in war is about adaptability, adapting on-the-fly, and knowing how you equipment works to find ways to use it to defeat the enemy's tactics and equipment (gotta seek to understand the enemy's equipment too). We did regular After Action Reviews after Every single mission while it was fresh in our minds, and devised changes to our own tactics daily to adapt to anything we saw or encountered, often times anticipating what the enemy would do next, or how they would change their tactics in response to us.
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...and Russia lost 24mil people over the 5years they fought Germany, barely holding back the Germans, barely gaining ground, barely hanging on if not for Lend Lease supplies of tanks, fighters, bombers, medicine, food, fuel, ammunition, etc. And had the Western Allies not opened multiple fronts in the Atlantic, North Africa, Italy, and France, as well as strategically bombing Germany for years, the Russians wouldn't have fared nearly as well as they did against the Germans.
Had the US not taught the Russians how to do mass production and assembly lines prior to the war it would have been even worse.
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@robbyowen9107 Most US pilots went into combat with only basic dogfight understanding, a few hundred hours of total flight time, and many not knowing aerodynamic concepts of stalls and spins. Even today low and high time pilots don't understand these concepts well overall. Heck, most pilots today (including CFIs and other professional pilots) can't explain to me how flaps work, why and when to use flaps, outside of the checklist procedures. I know because I've asked many (usually as a segway into having a conversation about stalling and performance of aircraft, etc.). I've talked to retired USAF jet fighter pilots, airline pilots, students, Private Pilots, CFIs, etc. You'd be surprised how little most of them know about many of these topics. And WW2 pilots had Far less training and experience, and tactics, performance, aerodynamics, and such wasn't nearly as well understood then compared to what we know now. We have benefit of hindsight, they did not.
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@james-faulkner I had a job, and an MOS. but our equipment was all new experimental stuff.
No, our maintenance was awesome, But we also helped do the maintenance as well. I fixed a lot of stuff myself. And we had civilian maintenance, but they were largely worthless. The maintenance team was not an entire platoon though, more like 1 squad from headquarters platoon.
Our company maintained 3 combat platoons of vehicles, with about 7 vehicles each. and a few spare vehicles.
The anonymity isn't for my unit, but for me personally. Yes, it seems too good to be true, and that's why the story needs to be told.
No, I am not that old, i have many decades ahead of me. Not sure which war you are thinking I fought in.
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@B_Estes_Undegöetz I am a CFI-I in both Airplanes and Helicopters, and a Mechanical and Aerospace Engineer.
Wing Loading is very relevant. When pulling Gs, your wing loading is increasing. The aircraft is effectively getting heavier. The wings can only supply so much lift at a given airspeed, and so to maintain flight at a given altitude must increase AOA to compensate as the G-load increases. This puts your AOA closer to its max angle at a higher airspeed.
Now, a 60deg banked turn, while descending and not trying to hold altitude, induces how much G-load on your aircraft? 2G? No, only 1G is on your aircraft. The 2Gs in a 60deg banked turn only applies when maintaining altitude in the turn. This is something many pilots and CFIs struggle with.
Another concept many pilots and CFIs alike struggle with, is the concept of maneuvering speed, and why maneuvering speed increases with weight.
Do you understand what an Accelerated Stall is, and what causes it?
Also, an airplanes minimum published flying speed (stall speed, Vs and Vso), is calculated for Max Gros Weight. But if you lighten the plane up, you can stall the aircraft well below stalling speed, depending upon how much payload capacity your aircraft has relative to the weight of the airplane. I would demonstrate this with student pilots even in a lightly loaded C172 by flying slow flight with the airspeed dropping to zero (position error combined with standard instruments not working well below ~40kts). But we were still flying and maintaining altitude, and the airspeed needle visibly went lower than published stall speed before dropping away to zero.
Can you cite a single place in any of the FAA publications where it says, “disturbed airflow over the wings”? I'd like to see what they have to say on teh issue. What causes disturbed airflow over the wings? Did you know turbulent flow, and flow separation over the wings is occurring Well above stalling speed? What makes a "laminar flow airfoil" different from other airfoil shapes? How does curvature of a wing produce lift? I bet you don't actually know. It's not Bernoulli's principle, as to use Bernoulli you have to have 3 conditions (one of which doesn't exist in real world, as well as constriction of airflow (venturi effect), which has been shown not to be a factor. There is a far better explanation out there, a new principle, by a much younger Aerospace engineer who is alive today.
Can you explain the role and purpose of flaps, and what effect they have on stall speed? Most pilots and CFIs cannot. They only know the book answer and only know how and when to use them when their checklist and/or procedures tell them to.
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