• Modern_medicine_isnt@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Thanks, I do appreciate the condensed version you have here over watching a bunch of youtube vids myself. The vids are so slow. Lol.

    I guess the maneuverability thing is fundamentally different in the air. On the ground, it’s easier to change direction or what not the slower you are going. Mainly I think because you depend on friction against the ground to move in any direction. But in the air of course you are redirecting the air passing over a surface to turn first, then that changes the thrust vector which combine to maneuver. So speed increases the effectiveness of the first part.

    I wonder if you had some kind of very powerful burst jet that could provide significant up or down thrust paired with the normal up or down controls… could you relocate the aircraft enough for a missle to go by before it can adjust course. It would have to be timed by computer of course. And those things ain’t light. So it would have to be a heck of a lot of burst thrust in a perpendicular direction. But theoretically it should be doable. Just likely not practical.

    • Atomic@sh.itjust.works
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      2 days ago

      Some planes also have thrust vectoring.

      And there are ways to defeat missiles. But not when you’re caught with your pants down.

      “Typically” or at least what you would expect from two major powers. Is that you see the other plane on radar long before you ever see it with your eyes. You’ll fire long range missiles, you assume they did the same. And then you start defensive maneuvers to bleed the missile out of energy.

      And if you’re so close to that IR seeking missiles are an option. You’ll probably have to pre-flare a lot hoping their missiles lock on to your flares instead of you.

      As to your theoretical idea. It is unfortunately not theoretically possible either. And you’ll just have to take my word for it. But I don’t think neither humans or aircrafts could survive the loads required