![]() |
Imperial Miles or Nautical Miles?
OK - so I have to launch my TLAMS within 100 miles of the target for the game to register this a a successful mission
Anyone know if this is Imperial Miles or Nautical miles? I am going to go with Imperial Miles today just to be sure (it is a shorter distance - 176000 Yards) But it would be nice to know :03: EDIT The title of this thread should say Statute Mile not Imperial Mile Apparently there is no such thing as an Imperial Mile You can have either a Statute Mile or a Nautical Mile Go Figure :doh: |
PS
It would be nice to be able to draw a circle from the target area with a 100 mile radius :up: |
For all nautical applications, including TLAM/TASM, Nm is the correct version to use. The US may use imperial, the rest of the world metric, but on the sea, we have apparently all agreed on something for once, and that is the nautical mile.
|
Quote:
All the ships on the seven seas have agreed on the Nautical Mile being the standard unit of measurement - and use knots as a common unit of measuring speed As an aside - this makes total sense to me - 1nm equals one minute of latitude - that totally makes sense to me as a unit of measurement Much more sense than a statute mile, which seems to be based upon furlongs Or possibly Rods (A 14th Century Surveyors unit of measurement) Or again possibly the distance a Roman Legion would cover in 1000 paces (And if you want to know more about the development of our units of measurement, please Wiki it - it just gets more confusing the more you delve into it :o. But this is the kind of stuff I find really interesting:03:) What I am actually asking is if we actually know whether the game uses Statute Miles or Nautical Miles The difference between the two is 26537 yards - so this could be very important The difference between getting a mission success or a mission failure:hmmm: |
Quote:
That said, my answer doesn't change - if everyone uses knots and Nm at sea, then the game uses the same system. |
Quote:
Sorry I didn't make that clear |
Quote:
:) |
I found launching from 200Kyards (100 nm) get's you a fail but 1700Kyards ( 100 statute miles) get's you a mission accomplished.
|
Quote:
Quote:
|
Quote:
A nautical mile is 6076 feet. |
Quote:
Quote:
60nm ÷ cos(45) = 84.85 ...so at 45° latitude, 60nm equals about 84'51" of longitude. (Or 1°24'51".) |
Quote:
Quote:
|
According to Wikipedia, the nautical mile's derivation used to be one minute of latitude, but it's now an SI-derived unit exactly equal to 1852 m.
Also, my knit-picking about how to abbreviate nautical miles is going to come full swing here: "the symbols M, NM, Nm, and nmi are all used" to represent nautical miles. Please note that nm is nanometers! and not nautical miles /endrant :D (yes I know that I probably know what you're talking about when you use "nm" but it's a big difference in terms of distance) |
1,852 meters is the International Nautical Mile. Quoting Bowditch:
Quote:
Quote:
Most navigators also use the abbreviation "nm". When we're talking about navigation, no one gets confused. As one friend put it: Quote:
|
Haha yes that's a fair assumption to make. Just be careful if you start talking about computer processors out there, too :D
|
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 12:03 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 1995- 2025 Subsim®
"Subsim" is a registered trademark, all rights reserved.