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How do u obtain range with the TBT?
The manual states that "the TBT only simulates the measuring process by the usage of a moving line index", not going into much detail. I hardly ever used the TBT even back in auto-targeting but I am at a loss as to how it is done in the game.
What exactly is a "moving line index"? I thought it would be a line you would drag to the topmast but I if so I haven't figured out how to use it. |
While using the TBT you have the same TDC controls available with the periscope.
http://i196.photobucket.com/albums/a...5732_538-1.jpg Here's the portion of the TDC on the right side of the screen. First you press the lower left button to bring up the range/bearing input section shown. Now with TBT pointed at the target and locked with the "L" key, you press the upper left button. That's the one that is not red. You'll see your image in the TBT split into 2 superimposed images: the original image which doesn't move and a second partially transparent image, which you can move using your mouse in the TBT window. You want to move the waterline of the movable image down to touch the tallest masthead and left-click. Then go back to the input portion shown above and press the red "send range/bearing to TDC" button. You've done it! :know: Only one more thing to do. Take your manual and use it start a campfire or prop up the short leg of a table. |
TDC
Breadcatcher;
take the manual and hang it next to your toilet bowl, it'll do more good there.;) It sounds like you're used to the German range finder as opposed to the U.S. method. The U.S. method utilizes a second image of the target the bottom of which is placed on the top of the original image in order to calculate the range. The principle is the same but instead of using two horizontal lines as in the German method it's two images. Hope this helps. If not, search under "using the TDC". :up: |
LOL
Aw poop, RR beat me to it.;)
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Thanks, guys. I don't think I locked the TBT onto the target as best as I can recall. I had ran into a Dutch tugboat and decided to use them as a target in a pratice surface attack--they hate that--when I noticed the problem.
It is true, I am more used to the German way, but I am starting to like the PK. I appreciate you help. breadcatcher |
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:hmm: I think you do need to be locked, though, to send mast height. |
How do I obtain range?
Not very well Breadcatcher... not very well. This position keeper thing has got the better of me. I miss my old Sh III TDC when I could put a torpedo any where I wanted it... |
Phaedrus, the American TDC can do everything the German one can, plus some very neat tricks to boot! It's just a matter of adapting to the different machinery and not trying to insist that it work exactly the same way.
And it takes time because many of the things you do with the TDC are automatic. You need to take them out of automatic into manual to think about every step for awhile. It takes time. But I can promise that learning the American TDC will make you a better U-Boat skipper, just as learning the German TDC will make you a better fleet boat skipper. |
I got it to work, am getting the double image. I think the first time I didn't click it on or something. I use the scope anyhow. I can get a closer and don't have to be concerned about a shell hitting the boat.
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It's all in your mental attitude toward the equipment you are using. I agree that having the TDC track more than one target at a time would be an improvement in the game. The real American TDC also had an input for target length and calculated offsets for any desired percentage of spread. Both of these were real advantages of the American TDC over the German one and are not modeled in SH4. Neither is a deal killer for either side. Learn both thoroughly and be better at both! |
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http://img244.imageshack.us/img244/6...1353bs2.th.jpg Quote:
The beauty of the american TDC was the incredible accurancy it could provide, thanks to the position keeper and the ability to directly enter ranges determined with active sonar and radar. This wonderful machine was developed in a time when the doctrine thought that getting close to a target would be very difficult due to enemy ASDIC and low submerged speed in submarines, and it came as a response allowing deadly accurate shots from 4000+ yards :rock: German doctrine called for close combat action in night surface attack, and hence their TDC was more simplified and with a higher priority in being able to quickly switch between targets, leaving precision in a second row due to the short distance the attack would be done. Our main problem is not just the attitude as you point out, but the fact that recreating such a complex tool as the US TDC would be a game in itself, and unfortunately the simplified version we have in the game lacks many key features like the spreads based on target length you mentioned. I have solved that with a printed table for various target lengths and distances, but still it would have been awesome to have it calculated in game by the TDC :ping: |
BTW I forgot in all my previous messages to mention that the TBT didn't have any split prism rangefinder AFAIK :hmm:
It just had a graded reticle like the scopes, and when radar ranges where not available, the IWO called the marks to the assitant, who would use a wiz-wheel or a precomputed table to tell the distance. |
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