i would +1 you but i don't have any karma sorry
but just to make yoou feel better +1 to you lol
but just to make yoou feel better +1 to you lol
Sorry, but I have to disagree with you there. The vertical position of the indicator (pitch) shows just that - your vertical position. The reason why it may seem like it is acting as positioning for your missle placement is because of the forward movement of your chopper.Not wrote:
... when I'm pointing my nose down to close in on the jets, that horizon line leaves the midpoint of my target reticle and moves up. This is because the horizon line also acts as your missile placement on the Y axis.
I'll look into this more closely and add it to the guide with your name credited if it works out. From the sound of it though I don't doubt this is true, but I'd like to get a handle on exactly how much difference it makes so I can write it up accurately from first hand experience. I've never had any trouble using the horizon as the Y axis placement, but it's quite possible that that's due to the way I fly.Psycho wrote:
Sorry, but I have to disagree with you there. The vertical position of the indicator (pitch) shows just that - your vertical position. The reason why it may seem like it is acting as positioning for your missle placement is because of the forward movement of your chopper.Not wrote:
... when I'm pointing my nose down to close in on the jets, that horizon line leaves the midpoint of my target reticle and moves up. This is because the horizon line also acts as your missile placement on the Y axis.
If you are flying at say 40mph, see a tank, put your nose down to line up the tank with your center reticle and fire - you will miss the tank. Not because you didn't line up with the horizon indicator, but because the missles (along with the chopper) were already moving horizontally at 40mph.
However, if you are hovering and nose down at a tank to fire at it, your missles will impact much closer to where the center reticle is because your missles won't be affected by forward momentum.
That is not to say that your post is not without merit. Using the horizon indicator in most situations is a good
rough estimate of where to fire.
Last edited by BMF-Nichman (2006-06-27 14:08:36)
This is why I made the dot wide. It's not meant to be a pinpoint, due to the fact that the choppers each have different spacing of their missiles. Typically, you're not firing at infantry anyway. If you have a gunner worth the spit in his mouth he can take down infantry that's visible enough for you to throw a missile at. They're anti-vehicle missiles and that's what they should be used for unless in extreme cases.BMF-Nichman wrote:
the dot isnt where the missles will land, they will never land in the middle. each chopper has a different width. sorry i cant tell you right now but i think they fire to the inside of the horizontal line _______ -[]- _______
Last edited by Not (2006-06-27 14:16:50)
I don't agree 100% there. I don't use a joystick and I'm rarely flying a constant speed. A friend of mine uses one and this works well for him. To each his own I suppose.SargeV1.4 wrote:
This is useless for us joystick users who have a throttle and don't fly at +100%, 0%, or -100% all the time. In other words, this only works when you're flying straight and at full speed. In any case, I'll just rely on my feeling as I prefer to circle around enemies rather than fly straight.
In Dalian Plant is one.bennisboy wrote:
hey, to practice in attack choppers, do u have to set up a LAN server or something cos I swear there are none in SP levels
If the powers that be see fit.Hacial wrote:
Make this featured post?
same here, that's a great guide, thanks! :) +1PitViper401 wrote:
Wow this is going to help me so much, I'd always just try and take my best guess at where they hit. +1
I haven't had an extensive amount of time to play with the speeds since I made this post, PC troubles and all, hopefully within the next few days I'll be able to devote some serious time to experimenting with this and I'll update the guide if I find anything major about the speed.elmo1337 wrote:
Doesnt it depend on the speed of the helicopter to?
ofcourse its true, think of this example, you are flying directly downwards at your target, to hit that target you need to be using the reticle not the horizontal line. However if you want to destroy something and your not going straight at it i start firing my missles as the horizontal goes past thus getting the tank on the front, centre and back rather than firing with the retical and due to forwards motion only hitting 1 or 2 missles on its back and not destroying it.Not wrote:
I'll look into this more closely and add it to the guide with your name credited if it works out. From the sound of it though I don't doubt this is true, but I'd like to get a handle on exactly how much difference it makes so I can write it up accurately from first hand experience. I've never had any trouble using the horizon as the Y axis placement, but it's quite possible that that's due to the way I fly.Psycho wrote:
Sorry, but I have to disagree with you there. The vertical position of the indicator (pitch) shows just that - your vertical position. The reason why it may seem like it is acting as positioning for your missle placement is because of the forward movement of your chopper.Not wrote:
... when I'm pointing my nose down to close in on the jets, that horizon line leaves the midpoint of my target reticle and moves up. This is because the horizon line also acts as your missile placement on the Y axis.
If you are flying at say 40mph, see a tank, put your nose down to line up the tank with your center reticle and fire - you will miss the tank. Not because you didn't line up with the horizon indicator, but because the missles (along with the chopper) were already moving horizontally at 40mph.
However, if you are hovering and nose down at a tank to fire at it, your missles will impact much closer to where the center reticle is because your missles won't be affected by forward momentum.
That is not to say that your post is not without merit. Using the horizon indicator in most situations is a good
rough estimate of where to fire.
Thank you for the heads up. +1