Rory Noonan
Posts: 2816
Joined: 12/18/2014 From: Brooklyn, NY Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: kvnjnny Thanks to everyone for looking into this! It seems that the game is functioning (modeling) correctly. However, this raises the question: are surfaces vessels more vulnerable to submarines that are less than 12nm distant and shallow? It seems that the Perry should have easily detected the Victor III even without a towed array - "Victor III #1 is moving at 22 kts at depth of 66 ft and cavitating. Distance to Perry is 9.6 nm." When I substituted a Spruance common to that period, the Spruance performed better but still had trouble close in. Same conditions, just substituted surface vessels Some preliminary conclusions: 1) The Perry class frigate or more accurately, the AN/SQR-18A (TASS) and the AN/SQS-56 sonars, are pretty poor escorts, Tom Clancey's writings not withstanding. 2) Active Sonar is fairly useless. It only broadcasts one's position at great distance and doesn't really add to detection value. - Once again this doesn't seem quite right; the analogy usually given is of throwing on a bright light in a dark room. Yes, the one with the light is now visible to everyone but everyone else in the room is also visible. The game modeling seems to suggest that instead of a bright light, someone strikes a match which gives a bit of illumination but mostly just tells everyone where you are - so why even strike the match or carry it? 3) Towed sonar arrays are of marginal improvement over hull mounted sonars - you may or may not detect subs and if you do, the best course of action is to get the ships out of there and pounce the pig-boats with helos! 4) Sonar is not Radar - radar "sees" everything in the sky within its ranges (discerning what it is, that's different); sonar does not "hear" everything in its effective range I will keep running some trials with different variables. Cheers to everyone who develops and contributes to CMANO! It is the finest sim on the market! All valid conclusions. Active sonar is useful in shallow, confined waters when hunting subs and also when a sub is detected at short range to firm up a firing solution. They very likely already know where you are in those cases so there's not much of a trade-off and the bonus is that you may detect and localise them before they're in a firing position. Towed arrays are pretty good but not all towed arrays are created equal. There's a lot of variables with passive sonar, if you're making lots of noise yourself (i.e. moving fast) it degrades your performance, also if there's something noisy along the same bearing as a sub you probably wont be able to pick the sub out from the background noise.
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