Nedum Posted Sunday at 04:27 PM Posted Sunday at 04:27 PM Is the issue with the CCIP "Dump Bombing" known? Since half a year, all "Dump Bombs" hitting a way too short if I am using the CCIP Mode. How far to short depends slightly on the dive Angle. The interesting part is, it differs from map to map. Caucasus: I can hit spot on (Instant Action, Caucasus, Free Flight). Germany: always 100+ feet too short. (Instant Action, Germany, Training Bomb drop). CPU: AMD Ryzen 9800X3D, System-RAM: 64 GB DDR5, GPU: nVidia 5090, Monitor: LG 38" 3840*1600, VR-HMD: Pimax Crystal/Super, OS: Windows 11 Pro, HD: 2*2TB and 1*4 TB (DCS) Samsung M.2 SSD HOTAS Throttle: TM Warthog Throttle with TM F16 Grip, Orion2 Throttle with F15EX II Grip with Finger Lifts HOTAS Sticks: Moza FFB A9 Base with TM F16 Stick, FSSB R3 Base with TM F16 Stick Rudder: WinWing Orion Metal
razo+r Posted Sunday at 04:40 PM Posted Sunday at 04:40 PM (edited) Did you check that your aircraft has good GPS signal and High system accuracy? But yes, there have been several reports in the past that CCIP has been buggy in the past. Chances are it's not fixed yet. Edited Sunday at 04:45 PM by razo+r
Furiz Posted Sunday at 04:46 PM Posted Sunday at 04:46 PM It's "Dumb" bombs, referring to no smart electronics like GPS or INS etc... Anyway, are you using TGP to lase before drop? it will help with accuracy of CCIP 1
razo+r Posted Sunday at 05:15 PM Posted Sunday at 05:15 PM 23 minutes ago, Furiz said: It's "Dumb" bombs, referring to no smart electronics like GPS or INS etc... Not sure if your post is in relation to OP or mine, so anyway; And yet, despite using AGR, INS drift affect(ed) the CCIP solution in the F-18. The chances are it's doing exactly the same in the F-16 are there. 1
Furiz Posted Sunday at 05:51 PM Posted Sunday at 05:51 PM Its in relation to OP's post. Yeah that's why I think using TGP to lase can help with accuracy.
RyanR Posted yesterday at 01:25 PM Posted yesterday at 01:25 PM CCIP has been dropping short for a while now. I'm not really sure why. Some of the guys find that more time for the INS drift to accumulate affects the amount of error. That seems odd, as CCIP should be independent of INS. -Ryan
Nedum Posted yesterday at 05:03 PM Author Posted yesterday at 05:03 PM (edited) 3 hours ago, RyanR said: CCIP has been dropping short for a while now. I'm not really sure why. Some of the guys find that more time for the INS drift to accumulate affects the amount of error. That seems odd, as CCIP should be independent of INS. -Ryan The interesting thing is that the impact point itself is quite precise, regardless of the map. The only problem is that it ranges from right on target to several hundred meters too short, but >>never<< too far to the right, too long, or too far to the left. If this were actually due to GPS or INS errors, then the impact point would have to shift depending on the direction from which the target is approached. But the impact zone itself would always be in the same area. And that is not the case! CCIP already worked when such good INS and GPS did not even exist. As far as I know, the impact point with CCIP is calculated completely independently of INS and CCIP. On 10/19/2025 at 6:46 PM, Furiz said: It's "Dumb" bombs, referring to no smart electronics like GPS or INS etc... Anyway, are you using TGP to lase before drop? it will help with accuracy of CCIP Oh? And I thought dump Bombs are called so, because they have no intelligent systems on board. Never heard that has something to do with how smart the plane is. On 10/19/2025 at 6:40 PM, razo+r said: Did you check that your aircraft has good GPS signal and High system accuracy? But yes, there have been several reports in the past that CCIP has been buggy in the past. Chances are it's not fixed yet. The question is, why did it work until six months ago and now it doesn't? Suddenly CCIP is dependent on INS and GPS drift? I would believe that if the point of impact also shifted depending on the approach direction. Then, regardless of the direction I'm approaching from, I would have to set all impacts in the same area. So sometimes too short or too long, or too far to the right or left, but the center of impact would have to be close together. Only then could one assume a dependency on one or both systems. 23 hours ago, Furiz said: Its in relation to OP's post. Yeah that's why I think using TGP to lase can help with accuracy. Yes, that can help, but it doesn't explain, why it's always too short and never too long or too far left or right. Everyone with the F16 and the Germany map can test it. There is NO Track needed. TOT < 2 minutes! If we get any relevant INS drift in this short amount of time, we have a bigger problem than CCIP bombs falling always too short. Edited yesterday at 05:13 PM by Nedum CPU: AMD Ryzen 9800X3D, System-RAM: 64 GB DDR5, GPU: nVidia 5090, Monitor: LG 38" 3840*1600, VR-HMD: Pimax Crystal/Super, OS: Windows 11 Pro, HD: 2*2TB and 1*4 TB (DCS) Samsung M.2 SSD HOTAS Throttle: TM Warthog Throttle with TM F16 Grip, Orion2 Throttle with F15EX II Grip with Finger Lifts HOTAS Sticks: Moza FFB A9 Base with TM F16 Stick, FSSB R3 Base with TM F16 Stick Rudder: WinWing Orion Metal
razo+r Posted yesterday at 05:09 PM Posted yesterday at 05:09 PM (edited) 6 minutes ago, Nedum said: The question is, why did it work until six months ago and now it doesn't? Suddenly CCIP is dependent on INS and GPS drift? I would believe that if the point of impact also shifted depending on the approach direction. Then, regardless of the direction I'm approaching from, I would have to set all impacts in the same area. So sometimes too short or too long, or too far to the right or left, but the center of impact would have to be close together. Only then could one assume a dependency on one or both systems. Half a year ago we got an INS/GPS update for the Viper. Chances are it influenced the CCIP calculations are existing. Perhaps the jets INS altitude is constantly drifting downwards, which could explain why the bombs all fall short, while the lateral drift is ignored. All we can do is supply ED with more tracks of this issue so that they eventually in a few years can fix the issue. Edited yesterday at 05:11 PM by razo+r
RogueSpecterGaming Posted yesterday at 05:21 PM Posted yesterday at 05:21 PM 15 minutes ago, Nedum said: Oh? And I thought dump Bombs are called so, because they have no intelligent systems on board. Never heard that has something to do with how smart the plane is. Again, it is not "dump" it is dumb. And it has nothing to do with how smart the jet is but rather how smart the bomb/munition itself is. Any bomb without GPS/INS, or any other type of guidance kit is considered to be dumb. Which is what Furiz said. Have you tried doing an A-CAL to calibrate the altitude. That could most likely be effected it. But with CCIP the shallower the dive the less accurate it is going to be, plus any wind can effect the accuracy and any slight shift of the jet up/down left/right can effect the accuracy. Best to post a track file so we can see what it is happening. I've never had accuracy issues in terms of "hundreds of meters" off in any direction. Maybe a few meters off, but that is within margin of error using CCIP especially with wind. I will post a track if you don't. My PC: GPU-AMD 6800XT OC / CPU- AMD RYZEN 5800X OC / 32 GB RAM 3200Mhz / 1TB SSD / 2TB HDD / 500GB M.2 / Monitor: 34" Ultrawide Samsung 1000R Curve / WinWing F16EX HOTAS / TM Cougar MFDs / TM TPR Rudder Pedals / TrackIR5 / ICP
Nedum Posted yesterday at 05:21 PM Author Posted yesterday at 05:21 PM 4 minutes ago, razo+r said: Half a year ago we got an INS/GPS update for the Viper. Chances are it influenced the CCIP calculations are existing. Perhaps the jets INS altitude is constantly drifting downwards, which could explain why the bombs all fall short, while the lateral drift is ignored. All we can do is supply ED with more tracks of this issue so that they eventually in a few years can fix the issue. So the navigation coordinates would always shift with the flight direction? I don't think that INS and GPS work this way. If so, that would mean, depending on the flight direction, the coordinates would move. Never saw this behavior. If so, then if you fly a circle around an STP, the STP would have to circle too. Na, I don't think that this work this way. CPU: AMD Ryzen 9800X3D, System-RAM: 64 GB DDR5, GPU: nVidia 5090, Monitor: LG 38" 3840*1600, VR-HMD: Pimax Crystal/Super, OS: Windows 11 Pro, HD: 2*2TB and 1*4 TB (DCS) Samsung M.2 SSD HOTAS Throttle: TM Warthog Throttle with TM F16 Grip, Orion2 Throttle with F15EX II Grip with Finger Lifts HOTAS Sticks: Moza FFB A9 Base with TM F16 Stick, FSSB R3 Base with TM F16 Stick Rudder: WinWing Orion Metal
razo+r Posted yesterday at 05:26 PM Posted yesterday at 05:26 PM Just now, Nedum said: So the navigation coordinates would always shift with the flight direction? I don't think that INS and GPS work this way. If so, that would mean, depending on the flight direction, the coordinates would move. Never saw this behavior. If so, then if you fly a circle around an STP, the STP would have to circle too. Na, I don't think that this work this way. No, I mean the altitude, not the lateral displacement. If the jet thinks it's higher than it actually is, the bombs will always fall short. But again, best is to provide some actual data, some tracks, otherwise this will go nowhere.
Solution Nedum Posted yesterday at 05:26 PM Author Solution Posted yesterday at 05:26 PM (edited) 14 minutes ago, RogueSpecterGaming said: Again, it is not "dump" it is dumb. And it has nothing to do with how smart the jet is but rather how smart the bomb/munition itself is. Any bomb without GPS/INS, or any other type of guidance kit is considered to be dumb. Which is what Furiz said. Have you tried doing an A-CAL to calibrate the altitude. That could most likely be effected it. But with CCIP the shallower the dive the less accurate it is going to be, plus any wind can effect the accuracy and any slight shift of the jet up/down left/right can effect the accuracy. Best to post a track file so we can see what it is happening. I've never had accuracy issues in terms of "hundreds of meters" off in any direction. Maybe a few meters off, but that is within margin of error using CCIP especially with wind. I will post a track if you don't. Oh, sorry. I meant feet, not meters. The Jet is hot on the ramp at mission start. I think that mean SALT input shouldn't be needed anymore, but I will test it. Flight time less than 2 minutes. So no A-CAL needed too. 10 minutes ago, razo+r said: No, I mean the altitude, not the lateral displacement. If the jet thinks it's higher than it actually is, the bombs will always fall short. But again, best is to provide some actual data, some tracks, otherwise this will go nowhere. Thank you, that make sense. Edited yesterday at 05:37 PM by Nedum CPU: AMD Ryzen 9800X3D, System-RAM: 64 GB DDR5, GPU: nVidia 5090, Monitor: LG 38" 3840*1600, VR-HMD: Pimax Crystal/Super, OS: Windows 11 Pro, HD: 2*2TB and 1*4 TB (DCS) Samsung M.2 SSD HOTAS Throttle: TM Warthog Throttle with TM F16 Grip, Orion2 Throttle with F15EX II Grip with Finger Lifts HOTAS Sticks: Moza FFB A9 Base with TM F16 Stick, FSSB R3 Base with TM F16 Stick Rudder: WinWing Orion Metal
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