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#1 |
Sea Lord
![]() Join Date: May 2008
Location: 1300 feet on the crapper
Posts: 1,860
Downloads: 2
Uploads: 0
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I found the single missions to not be a great training ground. Simply because I found myself in a position i would not have approached a convoy to begin with. In the campaign if you mess it up you can start again. What works for me especially with a convoy or a task force once I have some intel via radar, sonar or radio. I knuckle around the convoy well past the radar ranges of the escorts. Place my boat in a good intercept position and I get under a thermal layer at all stop and go quiet. I let the escorts pass then it is up to PD and pick a nice juicy merchant. Sneaking past escorts is doable but there are some tricks to it and like a magician we cant give them all away, but you have one good startegy here I gave you to start. Part of the fun is learning by trial and error.
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#2 |
Seaman
![]() Join Date: Jun 2008
Posts: 34
Downloads: 6
Uploads: 0
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New question:
I have two periscopes, the observation scope and the attack scope. I seem to be able to do TDC calculations and fire torps from either, however, so the distinction is lost on me. What is the purpose of two scopes, and when should I use one over the other? |
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#3 |
Ace of the deep .
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I never use the obs . The attack scope is skinnier and harder to spot and the obs scope can look right up where the attack cannot .
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#4 |
Samurai Navy
![]() Join Date: Apr 2005
Posts: 579
Downloads: 2
Uploads: 0
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If you're running Trigger Maru Overhauled, the observation scope is brighter than the attack scope, because the bigger head lets more light in. I use the attack scope during the day and the observation scope at night. In the stock game the only differences are magnification level and maximum angle of elevation.
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We, the unwilling, led by the unknowing, are doing the impossible for the ungrateful. We have done so much, for so long, with so little, that we are now qualified to do anything with nothing. |
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#5 |
The Old Man
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Sutton Coldfield England
Posts: 1,540
Downloads: 305
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When I first installed SH4, I started a war patrol on "easy" and just used it as practice. Now am running RSRD too and on realistic. But the lack of targets makes one fall asleep!!
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> > Captain!, there's a destroyer on the por........ periscope is flooded Sir! > Darkness is only the absence of Light; Ignorance is only the absence of knowledge © www.worldwartwo.uk www.captainwalker.uk |
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#6 |
Eternal Patrol
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Part of the problem is confusing the game with real life. I don't mean that in an insulting way; it's just that before SH3 and now SH4 no game ever modelled both periscopes, and it was something everybody said they wanted. I try to use both periscopes historically, just 'cause.
In real life both scopes have the same magnifications. The purpose of the observation scope is to observe, obviously. It does let in more light for night use, and cranks up 85 degrees for spotting aircraft. It also leaves a larger wake. Here is pretty much everything you ever wanted to know about periscopes: http://www.maritime.org/fleetsub/pscope/index.htm
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“Never do anything you can't take back.” —Rocky Russo |
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#7 | |
Ace of the deep .
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