WildBillKelsoe Posted July 27, 2012 Share Posted July 27, 2012 Spare time.. Enjoy 1 AWAITING ED NEW DAMAGE MODEL IMPLEMENTATION FOR WW2 BIRDS Fat T is above, thin T is below. Long T is faster, Short T is slower. Open triangle is AWACS, closed triangle is your own sensors. Double dash is friendly, Single dash is enemy. Circle is friendly. Strobe is jammer. Strobe to dash is under 35 km. HDD is 7 times range key. Radar to 160 km, IRST to 10 km. Stay low, but never slow. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Outlaw24 Posted July 27, 2012 Share Posted July 27, 2012 Nice work thanks! Spoiler: MSI Z790 Carbon WIFI, i9 14900KF, 64GB DDR4, MSI RTX 4090, Thrustmaster Warthog Throttle, VKB Gunfighter Ultimate MCG Pro w/200mm Extension, Winwing Orion Rudder Pedals W/damper, UTC MK II Pro, Virpil TCS Plus Collective, Dell AW3418DW Gsync monitor, 970 Pro M2 1TB (for DCS), Playseat Air Force Seat, KW-980 Jetseat, Vaicom Pro, 3X TM Cougar with Lilliput 8" screens. Tek Creations panels and controllers. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
WildBillKelsoe Posted July 27, 2012 Author Share Posted July 27, 2012 don't mention it. :thumbup: AWAITING ED NEW DAMAGE MODEL IMPLEMENTATION FOR WW2 BIRDS Fat T is above, thin T is below. Long T is faster, Short T is slower. Open triangle is AWACS, closed triangle is your own sensors. Double dash is friendly, Single dash is enemy. Circle is friendly. Strobe is jammer. Strobe to dash is under 35 km. HDD is 7 times range key. Radar to 160 km, IRST to 10 km. Stay low, but never slow. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TurboHog Posted July 27, 2012 Share Posted July 27, 2012 Thank you! Added to my pdf collection of charts :) 'Frett' Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
doright Posted July 28, 2012 Share Posted July 28, 2012 Does the gun rounds weight account for the expended brass being cycled back into the drum? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
WildBillKelsoe Posted July 28, 2012 Author Share Posted July 28, 2012 Does the gun rounds weight account for the expended brass being cycled back into the drum? That is a good question. Yes. Considering the GAU-8 Avenger fires the 30mm caliber (30x173mm) PGU-14:PGU-13 [AP:HE ratio of 5:1] rounds. With the average cartridge weight of 425 grams (15 oz.) for PGU-14 and 360 grams (12.6 oz.) for PGU-13 round. With the round consisting of cartridge + propellant + primer + projectile + penetrator.. PGU-14 AP on average weighs 727 grams (25 oz.), subtracting cartridge and primer ( 302 + 4 grams) gives 425 grams for projectile and penetrator (298 grams)... Roughly 10 oz. for casing X 1150 ______________________________ ~ 11500 oz (720 lbs) for spent cases going back to the drum. That is assuming my calculations are correct. You may look into it by hitting these and brain-teasing: http://www.dtd.ba/portal/index2.php?option=com_docman&task=doc_view&gid=176&Itemid=42 Although, the numbers I have are from the sim, and without knowledge of the manufacturer or even type of round (PGU-14 has many revisions), I'll stick to what I know without buggering myself getting to know these rds. Just happy to squash these 72/80/52's.. BRRRRRRRRRRRRRRMMM.. pheeeeeeeeeeeewwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww... AWAITING ED NEW DAMAGE MODEL IMPLEMENTATION FOR WW2 BIRDS Fat T is above, thin T is below. Long T is faster, Short T is slower. Open triangle is AWACS, closed triangle is your own sensors. Double dash is friendly, Single dash is enemy. Circle is friendly. Strobe is jammer. Strobe to dash is under 35 km. HDD is 7 times range key. Radar to 160 km, IRST to 10 km. Stay low, but never slow. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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