Spt Posted December 15, 2017 Posted December 15, 2017 Maybe there is a trick (like nttr) or maybe this is a bug, when I put coordinates on normandy map , the waypoint is very away of position expected . Thanks [sIGPIC][/sIGPIC]
unknown Posted December 15, 2017 Posted December 15, 2017 Now that you bring this topic up i tried it myself and i think it has something to do that you enter east and north coordinates in the ck37 but on normandy you get west and north coordinates on the F10 map. I'm a beginner in the Viggen and i didn't find any solution for that in the manual doing a quick search. But there must be a way because if you add a new landing airfield on the nttr map using the 99xx code the viggen directs you to the right airbase. Modules: KA-50, A-10C, FC3, UH-1H, MI-8MTV2, CA, MIG-21bis, FW-190D9, Bf-109K4, F-86F, MIG-15bis, M-2000C, SA342 Gazelle, AJS-37 Viggen, F/A-18C, F-14, C-101, FW-190A8, F-16C, F-5E, JF-17, SC, Mi-24P Hind, AH-64D Apache, Mirage F1, F-4E Phantom II System: Win 11 Pro 64bit, Ryzen 3800X, 32gb RAM DDR4-3200, PowerColor Radeon RX 6900XT Red Devil ,1 x Samsung SSD 970 EVO Plus 2TB NVMe, 2 x Samsung SSD 2TB + 1TB SATA, MFG Crosswind Rudder Pedals - VIRPIL T-50CM and VIRPIL MongoosT-50 Throttle - HP Reverg G2, using only the latest Open Beta, DCS settings
PabstBleuRibbon Posted December 21, 2017 Posted December 21, 2017 Bump to this, I'd love to mess around with the CK37 on Normandy, but the computer expects N/E coordinates. Mayyyyybe we could get a TAKT function to switch long/lat hemispheres? :)
Caput_58 Posted January 2, 2018 Posted January 2, 2018 Another bump. I've just spent a good hour trying to troubleshoot E/W reversed coordinates on Normandy. I'm sure there is a way, because as others have said, airfield coordinates are storable.
QuiGon Posted January 2, 2018 Posted January 2, 2018 I haven't encoutnered this problem as I'm only flying on the Caucasus till 2.5 comes out, but how did they make it work on NTTR? Does the NTTR solution not apply to Normandy as well? Intel i7-12700K @ 8x5GHz+4x3.8GHz + 32 GB DDR5 RAM + Nvidia Geforce RTX 2080 (8 GB VRAM) + M.2 SSD + Windows 10 64Bit DCS Panavia Tornado (IDS) really needs to be a thing!
lemoen Posted January 8, 2018 Posted January 8, 2018 I haven't encoutnered this problem as I'm only flying on the Caucasus till 2.5 comes out, but how did they make it work on NTTR? Does the NTTR solution not apply to Normandy as well? On NTTR you leave out the leading 1 for longitude i.e. 36° 6' 52.7292'' N and 115° 10' 22.1268'' W. becomes 360653 151022. I used the Viggen on Normandy but used a flightplan from the ME. I guess one can look at such coordinates displayed then just enter them in that way. 1
Snowman Posted January 8, 2018 Posted January 8, 2018 The 0-meridian is going through the Normandy map so the longitude coordinates will almost always exist in two places on the map. Example 012000E and 012000W both exist on the Normandy map. The CK37 computer doesn't have any way to tell a difference between this as far as I know. I hope Heatblur and/or ED have a solution to this. Skickat från min STF-L09 via Tapatalk 1 __________________ Intel i7-7700K @ 5.1GHz, Gigabyte Z170XP SLI 32 GB Corsair Vengeance @ 2666 Mhz (Stock 2400 Mhz), Gigabyte GTX 1080 Windfoce OC , PSU 650W Seasonic EK Watercooling (Open loop) Windows 10 Pro x64 Thrustmaster HOTAS Warthog + MFG Crosswind + Thrustmaster MFD
Korroz Posted January 25, 2018 Posted January 25, 2018 (edited) Considering the input limitations of the CK37 it would seem to have been designed to operate in quarter(ish) hemispheres. Sweden, as it happens is comfortably contained within the first 99 degrees east in the north hemisphere, which is probably why. Now the question is, was the CK37 hardcoded to only work within that constraint, or was there a way to tweak those assumptions that it makes? It might depend on what underlying data type the CK37 used for it's coordinates. Does anyone know how this was dealt with in the real life Viggen? Perhaps all you need is an offset setting in the CK37, instead of having flags for N/S and W/E. Actually, that's probably what I'd have done if I was an engineer at that time, haha. That would also explain a little how NTTR could work, but I still wonder how that stacks up to reality. As an anecdote, I discovered this coordinate confusion as I tried out the RB-15 for the first time. I must have tried to enter the coordinates for the missile 5-6 times, confirming that the numbers read back alright and everything, but when I approached the target to fire there was always a red light and no symbology where I expected. Pretty confusing but eventually I saw what was going on. Luckily, leaving Bx6-9 undefined and radar fixing Bx8 gives you a standard layout and you can fix each missile markpoint after that. Less pre-planned as I wanted but at least no show-stopper. Edited January 26, 2018 by Korroz Embarrasing typo.
Holton181 Posted January 25, 2018 Posted January 25, 2018 Sweden, as it happens is comfortably contained within the first 99 degrees west in the north hemisphere... ?????????? West-most: 10°57′27″E East-most: 24°10′00″E It's pretty much an "Eastern country"... Helicopters and Viggen DCS 1.5.7 and OpenBeta Win7 Pro 64bit i7-3820 3.60GHz P9X79 Pro 32GB GTX 670 2GB VG278H + a Dell PFT Lynx TrackIR 5
Korroz Posted January 26, 2018 Posted January 26, 2018 Ugh, what an embarrassing typo. Yeah, east is what I meant.
renhanxue Posted January 26, 2018 Posted January 26, 2018 (edited) Considering the input limitations of the CK37 it would seem to have been designed to operate in quarter(ish) hemispheres. Sweden, as it happens is comfortably contained within the first 99 degrees east in the north hemisphere, which is probably why. Now the question is, was the CK37 hardcoded to only work within that constraint, or was there a way to tweak those assumptions that it makes? It might depend on what underlying data type the CK37 used for it's coordinates. Does anyone know how this was dealt with in the real life Viggen? It's actually significantly more restrictive in reality than it is in DCS. In reality, the computer only supports input of longitudes greater than 0° but less than 40°, and latitudes larger than 40° but less than 90°. Roughly speaking, it supports longitudes from Greenwich in the west to Yaroslavl in the east, and latitudes from the North Pole to Madrid in the south. One upside of this is that you can enter latitude and longitude in any order on the real aircraft - the two coordinates have different numerical ranges and the computer can automatically detect which is which. This was hardcoded as far as I am aware, and not only on the AJ 37 - it was the same on all the other Viggen variants, including the JA 37 all the way up to the JA 37C, despite its much more modern computer. I guess the very last Viggen variant - the short-lived JA 37Di, which was specifically intended for international interoperability - might have changed it though, but I'm not actually sure. I guess if they had ever exported the Viggen they would've needed to fix this, but as it was, no Viggen ever left Europe and it was never an issue. Sweden did not have any territorial expansionist or power projection intentions and the aircraft was plenty capable in its intended area of operations. At air shows in the UK or in France I guess they relied on paper maps. Here's the relevant section from the JA 37C's English flight manual (note the references to the data link system which didn't exist on the AJ 37 - an air combat controller on the ground can upload waypoints directly to your aircraft, among other things): Edited January 26, 2018 by renhanxue
Korroz Posted January 27, 2018 Posted January 27, 2018 Sweet info, thanks Renhanxue. But yeah, this poses a problem for Heatblur since the AOs in DCS is pretty much outside of that zone. I suppose implementing DCS specific TAKT codes for coordinate input would introduce the least amount of deviation from the real thing though.
Apache600 Posted December 8, 2018 Posted December 8, 2018 Bumping for recognition. Any progress made on this to remedy the issue with Normandy and Ref LOLA? [sIGPIC][/sIGPIC] The Museum Relic Campaign: --> http://forums.eagle.ru/showthread.php?t=164322 Community Missions (SP & MP) --> https://forums.eagle.ru/showthread.php?t=205546
QuiGon Posted September 27, 2021 Posted September 27, 2021 Still an issue (although it's true to the real bird). Intel i7-12700K @ 8x5GHz+4x3.8GHz + 32 GB DDR5 RAM + Nvidia Geforce RTX 2080 (8 GB VRAM) + M.2 SSD + Windows 10 64Bit DCS Panavia Tornado (IDS) really needs to be a thing!
SGT Coyle Posted November 22, 2021 Posted November 22, 2021 So I guess a Falklands adventure is out of the question. Night Ops in the Harrier IYAOYAS
QuiGon Posted November 22, 2021 Posted November 22, 2021 (edited) 23 minutes ago, SGT Coyle said: So I guess a Falklands adventure is out of the question. The Falklands don't have the same problem that Normandy has, with the prime meridian running through it and thus having east and west coordinates alike. Edited November 22, 2021 by QuiGon Intel i7-12700K @ 8x5GHz+4x3.8GHz + 32 GB DDR5 RAM + Nvidia Geforce RTX 2080 (8 GB VRAM) + M.2 SSD + Windows 10 64Bit DCS Panavia Tornado (IDS) really needs to be a thing!
SGT Coyle Posted November 22, 2021 Posted November 22, 2021 23 minutes ago, QuiGon said: The Falklands don't have the same problem that Normandy has, with the prime meridian running through it and thus having east and west coordinates alike. I'm thinking more of a North South thing. Do we have any Maps South of equator? Night Ops in the Harrier IYAOYAS
QuiGon Posted November 22, 2021 Posted November 22, 2021 40 minutes ago, SGT Coyle said: I'm thinking more of a North South thing. Do we have any Maps South of equator? Not yet, but same logic should apply Intel i7-12700K @ 8x5GHz+4x3.8GHz + 32 GB DDR5 RAM + Nvidia Geforce RTX 2080 (8 GB VRAM) + M.2 SSD + Windows 10 64Bit DCS Panavia Tornado (IDS) really needs to be a thing!
SGT Coyle Posted November 22, 2021 Posted November 22, 2021 13 minutes ago, QuiGon said: Not yet, but same logic should apply That's what I thought. You have to forgive my pessimistic leanings. I follow "O'Toole's Law"- Murphy was an optimist. Night Ops in the Harrier IYAOYAS
Machalot Posted November 22, 2021 Posted November 22, 2021 1 hour ago, QuiGon said: Not yet, but same logic should apply I think it would just assume all latitude is south, similar to using all west latitude in Nevada. "Subsonic is below Mach 1, supersonic is up to Mach 5. Above Mach 5 is hypersonic. And reentry from space, well, that's like Mach a lot."
QuiGon Posted November 22, 2021 Posted November 22, 2021 55 minutes ago, Machalot said: I think it would just assume all latitude is south, similar to using all west latitude in Nevada. Yeah, that's what I meant. Heatblur probably has to implement a quick map check for the Falkland map first, so it might not work right away when the Falkland map releases. Intel i7-12700K @ 8x5GHz+4x3.8GHz + 32 GB DDR5 RAM + Nvidia Geforce RTX 2080 (8 GB VRAM) + M.2 SSD + Windows 10 64Bit DCS Panavia Tornado (IDS) really needs to be a thing!
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