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SUBSIM: The Web's #1 resource for all submarine & naval simulations since 1997 |
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#1 |
Sea Lord
![]() Join Date: Jun 2006
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Re-looking at the real nav stuff, as I found myself a bit lost at times
First stop is Dead Reckoning Usually done by keeping a record of your speed and direction. A quick test revealed that SH3 differs from the real world. This I think was mentioned by someone else, but here it is, for anyone else trying to decipher the Nav problems. - SH3's world is 43,200 km (width) x 21,600 km (Height) - These are 2x the dimensions of the large map. - 1 Knot = 1.8 km per hour. - The real world has 1 knot = 1.852 kph Funny enough the distance covered seems to be irrespective of (not affected by) the sea conditions ![]() Next on the list are the local and GMT times and anything else that come to mind. ![]() Last edited by vanjast; 08-02-14 at 06:50 AM. |
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#2 | |
Gefallen Engel U-666
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http://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showthread.php?t=214436 "Very good grasshopper!"
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"Only two things are infinite; The Universe and human squirrelyness?!! |
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#3 |
Sea Lord
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![]() ![]() No, not my posts.. ![]() About 2 or 3 years ago somebody posted something about the SH3 (or SH4) nautical mile, which isn't the same as real life. I've done some measurments on a test mission going NWSE at 2 and 7 knots over 6 hours, in smooth and 'rough'ish' seas, and found I'm getting the same distance traveled on each speed setting. @ 7 knots for 6 hours = 75.6km (75.6/6 = 12.6 -> 12.6/7 = 1.8) @ 2 knot for 6 hours = 21.5km => 1.79 I've just re-edited so it makes better sense RL: 1 Nautical Mile = 1852 m 1 minute of Arc = 1 Nautical mile 1 degree of arc (60 minutes of Arc) = 60 Nautical miles (111 km) SH3: 1 Nautical Mile = 1800m (traveling at 1 Knot sub speed) 1 minute of Arc = 2000m 1 degree of Arc (60 minutes of Arc) = 120km Wot a mess ? As long as you keep the differences in mind you shouldn't have a navigation problem. Funny enough it still seems that the stars, sun and moon 'rotate normally' as per SH3's grid. Last edited by vanjast; 08-02-14 at 12:20 PM. |
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#4 | |
Sea Lord
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Another defect of the SH3 model. But important to know. I had always cut speed in the worst weather. Apparently, there is no point. |
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#5 |
Sea Lord
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I'm not sure, as they might still have a fuel usage calculator that depends on weather and speed, which could be independent on the distance traveled - although this seems silly.
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#6 |
Hauptman
Join Date: Mar 2013
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Wouldn't the distance discrepancies be location dependent? Since the SH3 map is basically a flattened globe, I would think at the equator the distances in SH3 vs RL would be equal. Near the poles SH3 distances would be vastly larger than RL. All points (lines) of latitude would give larger distance errors the further from equator.
I would think this makes deduced reckoning quite difficult in game. T |
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#7 |
Sea Lord
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I still have to check this as I only done equator checks.
I'll come back later with a result Edt: Exactly the same result at 80N - The world is square and flat ![]() Last edited by vanjast; 08-02-14 at 12:13 PM. |
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#8 |
Sea Lord
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Just a point to note:
Don't mix this lot up with your in-game optics/3D visuals... These are two separate items. The visuals rely on the cameras.dat file and is a different story to the maps. ![]() |
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#9 | |
Silent Hunter
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[EngineProperties] The graphical scale on the dial might not be completely linear, and account for the suggestion that 1 SH3 nautical mile is close to 1.8km. Personally, the 1.852 km/nm value has always seemed accurate to me. I'm sure I would have noticed the 2.8% difference at some point along the years. |
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#10 |
Sea Lord
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Speed controlled on the indicator dial.
I set the position as accurately as possible and wait for the number indicator to hit '7'. I suppose to do it scientifically I should average out a number of tries... but this is good enough ![]() I tried 7 and 1 knot speeds and the SH3 Nautical Mile in both, came to 1.8Km. |
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#11 |
Soundman
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I've been doing the same research for my printable SH3 charts and came to the same conclusions - just as we know the "circumference" of SH3 World is 3125km larger than RL.
Shameless chart plug: http://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showthread.php?t=213987 The world is definitely equiretangular - programmed from the 120km long lat, which makes life easier for navigation in some ways. Also allows for easy RL comparisons with my coord method (which is less relevant with your Real Nav chart in-game of course) Another shameless plug: http://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showthread.php?t=209834 Sea state does affect your speed, just watch the dial. If it moves between 6 and 7 kts I've found 6.5 kts is remarkably accurate for dead reckoning. However I suspect the level of time compression affects this. In still trying to break it to try and find out exactly how much it affects your speed more precisely. ![]()
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“Die Südfrüchte runter vom Kartentisch. Auf Bananen kann ich nicht navigieren.” Last edited by Karl Heinrich; 08-06-14 at 04:28 PM. |
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#12 | |
Sea Lord
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Say your indicated Log speed is 7 knots: 1) On a dead flat sea the horizontal speed would also be 7 knots. 2) As the sea conditions get worse, your ship has a vertical speed/movement component, which effectively reduces your horizontal speed, even though your indicated speed is still 7 knots. SH3 seem to bypass this 2) reality and calculates your horizontal 1) speed for you, no matter which sea conditions. The wobbly Log in high seas. It'll be nice to have this, wind resistance, currents, tides and seasonal conditions effecting navigation. ![]() |
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#13 |
Loader
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I need the formula for calculating real world latitude / longitude data from SH3 positioning data.
Example from the exam navigation mission "Navigation.mis": sub starting position: SH3 data: InitLongOff = 6856974.000 InitLatOff = 5584324.500 Estimated real world data: Long 09.43°E Lat 55.15°N (start location is Aro sund / Denmark) How to calculate from 6856974.000 to get 09.43°?
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Dietrich von Carlewitz, 2nd Lt. U-29 |
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#14 | |
Commodore
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Table 7 on page 50 of the GWX Manual that gives you this information. Basically, GWX latitude = 120 km/degree; Real latitude = ~110 - 111 km/degree GWX longitude = 120 km/degree, real Longitude varies with latitude, so that it's about 111 km/degree at the equator, ~85 km at 40 degrees latitude, and 0 km at the poles. There's a precise equation somewhere, but I've forgotten where it is. Hope this helps!
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#15 |
中国水兵
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While working with patSH3r and the positioning system within it. I somehow (can't remember how today) came up with a pretty good estimate of the SH3 world globe median radius. The source code says that it's 6875493 meters (while it's ~6371000 IRL).
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