Hi.
There are a few Richard Bong campaigns on M4T. This had some of the better reviews: http://www.mission4today.com/index.php?name=Downloads&file=details&id=3868
On a side note, I hope there is a special place in hell laid out for the a**hole that made/named the well known drug inhalation device that reduces this great man's legacy to something that will incite the immature teenager in almost everyone to snicker.
Thank the lord some people remember, though....
Ta183Huckebein
Thank you very much, I also found it after a little search:
http://www.mission4today.com/index.php?name=Downloads&file=details&id=3868This would be a treat for a talented campaign builder like Poltava, to make this campaign 4.12 compatible and include Rabaul by Bee and Northern Borneo by SAS~farang65 and so on..MiSp Pacific, agracier's latest Pacific maps...
---
Otto:
If you allow, I will expand on this a little from what I read and I admit, it lacks the so needed hard data:
The P-38s where much better than its reputation, but indeed the European variants delivered to GB suffered from missing super chargers.
Also the European rather cold climate proved to be not optimal for those Allison engines.
These two facts made a lot to the WWII Lightning warfare.
Also later variants, especially the late "L" models had boosted controls and again stronger upgraded engines.
Still the roll rate was its biggest issue, the turn rate is good, also sustained AFAIK, the problem that occours may be a sudden stall and that at low altitude can be very lethal and killed Thomas McGuire:
http://acepilots.com/usaaf_mcguire.htmlIn the Pacific, the Lightnings proved to be very effective.
First, the Allison engines had far better performance in this climate. They had working superchargers.
And another key was tactic: The Pacific squadrons used the pros of the P-38 to the optimum, and were instructed never to get in a situation of a turn and burn but rather zoom and boom fight.
There was another Lightning planned, a version with Merlin engines and IIRC boosted controls and that, hyothetically, might have become the best Allied fighter of WWII, but Lockheed was denied to shut down the production line for the few weeks needed to make the accomodations, so important was the production, and what might have benn the mega Lightning never took off. Except as modified prototype.
The Lightning surely was inferior as a turn and burn fighter compared to FW-190s or P-51s (the latter also no turn and burn craft designed plane) or other planes like Zekes or later japanese fighters like Ki-84s.
But with its firepower, speed and climb it was a fiercy adversary.
Not easy to fly but those who mastered it loved it.