VJS, I will say that cutting your throttle is extremely effective when you are not at risk from other pilots, especially for shooting down blackhawks in the manner you suggest as you get much more time to take them out.
However, I wrote this with the intent of teaching people how to fly when there are other accomplished pilots in the air. I have to say, if you are a throttle cutter, you are hamburger. Even if the jet chasing you doesnt realize you've cut your throttle - which is rare because you can cut your throttle too when your chasing a throttle cutter - they can still loop on you before you can get to full speed. More so, spotting a throttle cutter is pretty easy if you have flying time, and in addition the F35Bs rear diaphram goes vertical instead of horizontal and its pretty easy to see.
I have seen literally hundreds of people cut their throttles while I'm chasing them, only to recieve rockets up the asshole. Slowing down, even below 90% full speed seems to ensure the missles track properly - I don't know why the code works like this, but missles actually become useful lol. Sometimes I have flown passed them as you say, and looped back while they are accelerating back to full speed, but because they are not at full speed, they are flareless and at your mercy. I have also seen throttle cutters on Wake Island trying to slow their bombing runs on the airfield, or lay down more MG fire then you can at normal speed. Needless to say, if a decent pilot is in the air, they get chewed up - they can't turn and burn out of the way of rockets, the rockets will hit when you go that slow even if you are full afterburners.
I'm not saying your technique doesn't work, I am saying don't use it when there are real threats in the air, as opposed to enemy jets just doing bombing runs on your airfield and leaving you alone lol.
On another note, you are welcome to loose as many missles as you please, the reason I specify how many to loose is that you are increasing the chance for a hit, you have more missles left over, you can take down more targets before reloading, and you have less chance for TKs. This is important in the J10 where missles, bombs, and MG ammo are all low, and also important for the F35B where reloading requires to fly your ass back to the carrier in Wake Island. A J10 runway pass yeilds you 250 MG, 1 bomb, 5 out of 6 missles. An F35B gets fully loaded on a runway pass so you can afford to be trigger happy on maps other then wake.
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I'd like to clarify something that is extremely useful but nobody seems to grasp - you aren't leaving your missle mode on for a long time, waiting for missle lock, then spamming a bunch of missles. The tricks I describe always give me hits because the second you swap into missle mode, you ought to hear a lock within 1-2 seconds, loose a missle, and it will score a hit because of the flying method I describe above. This gives your enemy 1-2 seconds to flare out, afterburn, and change directions if they are a jet, or take flare out and take evasion action if they are a heli. People simply do not flare out fast enough, nor does it matter because you are so close the instant you have missle lock, your missle is away.
The method of flying I describe above, is to get stealthily behind your prey, swap to missle, loose, back into bomb mode, before they even know what hits them. If your flying around keeping missle mode out in advance, you are going to miss with your rockets and give them way too much time to know your coming. E.g. vs. the blackhawk you should come in blazing with MGs but in bomb mode, at the last possible moment switch to missle mode, as soon as you hear lock, loose one missle, and then pull up or knife edge before you collide. Pulling up seems to yield more collisions then kinfe edge as an aside
This last moment lock and release gives the pilot virtually no notice they are about to take a rocket up the ass, for all they know someone is being lame on the stingers again or jets are buzzing around etc. Because you are so close when you execute this technique, the missle really has no choice to but to collide with the chopper. Better yet you can do this technique over and over without fear of other jets trying to take you out because you are not sacrificing speed for time on target. It only takes two passes to finish a blackhawk, and one pass to finish and attack chopper - this method is extremely effective and ammo conserving, and better yet you aren't getting missle tks
Last edited by [CANADA]_Zenmaster (2005-11-23 11:03:19)