jdkbph
Posts: 339
Joined: 2/11/2007 From: CT, USA Status: offline
|
quote:
ORIGINAL: Sunburn There is a complication in this, in that by allowing weapons like JDAM to hit mobile-but-currently-static units like S-300, while at the same time not giving the latter class the "smarts" to pack up and leave, we are essentially dooming them to no better survivability than plain static units. So need to think whether we'll do the JDAM change first and then later make mobiles smarter (thus creating the "gap"), or delay the JDAM modification in order to bundle it with the better mobile smarts and thus avoid having the gap altogether. Decisions. Not sure about any of this but I'm going to throw this out there anyway. The question in my mind is what kind of mobility are we talking about. Is it a strategic mobility where one can position assets based on an assessment of future air activity, or is it a tactical mobility where someone might shout "hey look... there's a bad guy about to drop a bomb on us!" resulting in the whole deal immediately packing up and heading for cover? If the latter, then we should probably leave things alone. GPS JDAMs, etc, can't target a moving (or movable) SAM battery any more than they could target a moving ship. If the former then a deployed and active SAM battery should be considered stationary for the purpose of weapons targeting. Of course that might require a "state" toggle for certain weapons systems, with an appropriate delay while they transition from one state (fixed/stationary) to another (mobile). And I would also assume they would be non-functional "targets" only while in the "mobile" state, and most vulnerable while transitioning between states... both stationary and non-functional. All assuming of course you hadn't already thought of this and built it into the game. JD
< Message edited by jdkbph -- 4/3/2014 11:52:33 PM >
|