Slateford-5
03-25-08, 12:18 PM
Hello All,
Firstly, I am loving this game, having added on GWX2. Now on Patrol 3 in a VIIB out of Kiel and something strange (to me) is happening.
Just to the East of the Shetlands, I spied a lone warship. It was a crisp, still Jan 40 morning, pink and duck shell blue sky, not a ripple on the sea. I sailed up to this warship, on the surface, for a look (not very clever, but I was curious). It just sat there doing nothing. 5,000, 4,000, 3,000 m: still nothing: It was completely stationary, a C&D classes British Destroyer. At 1,000 m I stopped, manned the deck gun and fired a shell at it: still nothing. 15 shells later, it sank gently, without having so much as fired a peashooter. Is that normal?
2 days later, I encounter my first convoy on a stormy night, inbound, NW of Ireland. I crept alongside it for most of the night, trying to overtake, popping up the periscope occassionally to see what was on offer: a 3 x 4 grid of merchants, mostly 2,000 tonners, but with 3 Ore Carriers in the centre. In the confusion of the storm and the melee of sound contacts, I inadvertendly came to persicope depth INSIDE the convoy. 2 salvoes of 2 at 2 of the ore carriers: one broke in half, the other started burning merrily. THEN, immediately after the torpedoes struck, the ships did a weird thing: the 5 northern most freighters headed due south and the remaining 5 southerly ones head due north, like a bizarre dance routine. I could see the 2 destroyers outside of the convoy zig zagging around like crazy trying to get at me, but couldn't get near in the confusion: this allowed me to sink a Granville on the surface at 250 m with gunfire, sailing alongside, raking the water line, before I headed for the depths, out on the wakeside of the original convoy path. Again, this seems strange behaviour to me: was I just incredibly lucky?
I put the gramophone on and had a beer after that.
Firstly, I am loving this game, having added on GWX2. Now on Patrol 3 in a VIIB out of Kiel and something strange (to me) is happening.
Just to the East of the Shetlands, I spied a lone warship. It was a crisp, still Jan 40 morning, pink and duck shell blue sky, not a ripple on the sea. I sailed up to this warship, on the surface, for a look (not very clever, but I was curious). It just sat there doing nothing. 5,000, 4,000, 3,000 m: still nothing: It was completely stationary, a C&D classes British Destroyer. At 1,000 m I stopped, manned the deck gun and fired a shell at it: still nothing. 15 shells later, it sank gently, without having so much as fired a peashooter. Is that normal?
2 days later, I encounter my first convoy on a stormy night, inbound, NW of Ireland. I crept alongside it for most of the night, trying to overtake, popping up the periscope occassionally to see what was on offer: a 3 x 4 grid of merchants, mostly 2,000 tonners, but with 3 Ore Carriers in the centre. In the confusion of the storm and the melee of sound contacts, I inadvertendly came to persicope depth INSIDE the convoy. 2 salvoes of 2 at 2 of the ore carriers: one broke in half, the other started burning merrily. THEN, immediately after the torpedoes struck, the ships did a weird thing: the 5 northern most freighters headed due south and the remaining 5 southerly ones head due north, like a bizarre dance routine. I could see the 2 destroyers outside of the convoy zig zagging around like crazy trying to get at me, but couldn't get near in the confusion: this allowed me to sink a Granville on the surface at 250 m with gunfire, sailing alongside, raking the water line, before I headed for the depths, out on the wakeside of the original convoy path. Again, this seems strange behaviour to me: was I just incredibly lucky?
I put the gramophone on and had a beer after that.