Larry Holt
Posts: 1969
Joined: 3/31/2000 From: Atlanta, GA 30068 Status: offline
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quote:
Originally posted by Alastair Anderson:
[B...
However I have noticed that if I give the same target hex to the same mortar the following turn, no matter who the spotter is, that the fire hits the same hex. In other words it missed the first turn and also the second, but in both instances the hex the fire does fall in is the same.
Al[/B]
If I understand this question correctly, this is not a bug but the way that arty acts in real life. A firing unit receives a target grid (which may be accurate or not), calculates its firing data, then fires. The fires are going to all go to a small target area as all tubes are using the same plotting data. There is some varience in where all the shells fall due to varying wind, different tube temperatures, different firing charge lots, etc. (which are attempted to be accounted for when calculating the data). Now if there is an observer, he can adjust fire onto the target but the dispersion of fires is not greater for unobserved than observed, its just off from where it was intended to go.
Fires can be requested to be more or less concentrated. IIRC, these are called closed and open sheaf fires. The tubes can be directed to fire on converging or diverging azmiuths. Fires on troops in the open would be an example of a soft target, spread out that open sheaf fires would be used for. Closed sheaf would be used for point targets such as bunkers.
I do not know how things were with various armies in WWII but presently, the US Army teaches everyone to adjust fires. If the person orginating the call for fire can't figure out how to do it, the firing unit can coach them through the procedure.
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An old soldier but not yet a faded one.
OK, maybe just a bit faded.
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Never take counsel of your fears.
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