Changing direction of Autocannon
Moderators: Admiral of the Fleet, Vice Admiral
- Cold Blood Nor
- Full Member
- Posts: 684
- Joined: Sun Jan 26, 2020 3:15 pm
- 4
- Location: Norway
- Contact:
-
Loading…
Changing direction of Autocannon
Hi all!
I shared this on discord yesterday, but in case it get lost or buried here is a short video I made on how to change the direction the Autocannon Strafe.
[media]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HmT0KO2K4TY[/media]
I shared this on discord yesterday, but in case it get lost or buried here is a short video I made on how to change the direction the Autocannon Strafe.
[media]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HmT0KO2K4TY[/media]
Cold Blood out.
"What? Say something! Am I so beautiful that you've got no words left?" - Midna
"What? Say something! Am I so beautiful that you've got no words left?" - Midna
-
- Admiral of the Fleet
- Posts: 2002
- Joined: Tue Oct 23, 2018 7:30 pm
- 6
- Location: Loughborough
- Contact:
Re: Changing direction of Autocannon
It appears from much testing that the first point placed with the cursor will dictate the centre of the strafe. Point A. This is a common control, directed fire or not. As stated, the aircraft always appears from the right.
To alter the angle/attitude of the strafe, Keep the binoculars in-hand and wait until "station" confirms the command. Point B. The point the cursor is indicating at the moment the cursor turns orange dictates the angle and attitude of the strike (Point A to point B).
The second point must be closer to the commander than the first, otherwise the command will default to perpendicular. This much is known.
However, even when done "correctly" it's not 100% accurate and predictable. Sometimes it still comes in perpendicular to the line of sight at point of command irrespective of the second cursor. Any help in determining the variables and thus ensuring reliability would be appreciated.
To alter the angle/attitude of the strafe, Keep the binoculars in-hand and wait until "station" confirms the command. Point B. The point the cursor is indicating at the moment the cursor turns orange dictates the angle and attitude of the strike (Point A to point B).
The second point must be closer to the commander than the first, otherwise the command will default to perpendicular. This much is known.
However, even when done "correctly" it's not 100% accurate and predictable. Sometimes it still comes in perpendicular to the line of sight at point of command irrespective of the second cursor. Any help in determining the variables and thus ensuring reliability would be appreciated.
Facebook Ebs Spawnsy
Got the SQUEE?
Pick up your suffering and bear it. (J. B. Peterson)
Stay hard. (D. Goggins)
Easy now.
Got the SQUEE?
Pick up your suffering and bear it. (J. B. Peterson)
Stay hard. (D. Goggins)
Easy now.
-
- Vice Admiral
- Posts: 240
- Joined: Wed Oct 24, 2018 9:49 pm
- 6
- Contact:
Re: Changing direction of Autocannon
I had a go. I saw this on a Steam guide but I can't find it anymore. The jist is it's not what you look at, it's the direction you're facing.
Point A is the target of the strafe. The strafe hits Point A perpendicular right-to-left of the commander's view when the arrow turns from green to orange, or when you hear the radio beep just before Station confirms the call-in - you don't even need to have the binoculars in your hands when this happens. I don't think you need to be in range of the observer either. This is Point B, except it's not really a point, it's the direction you are facing
For example: I pick a target directly North of me (bearing 0). If I am looking towards 0 when confirmed, the strafe hits from 90->270 on the compass, still on Point A. If I am looking at 180, so I turn around and face backwards, the strafe goes the other way - 270->90.
It's kinda hard to explain, so here's a Paint masterpiece. I call it "Commander tries to kill the fuck out of a box from different angles":
Hope this is useful. I did a fair amount of testing but criticism/corrections welcome!
Point A is the target of the strafe. The strafe hits Point A perpendicular right-to-left of the commander's view when the arrow turns from green to orange, or when you hear the radio beep just before Station confirms the call-in - you don't even need to have the binoculars in your hands when this happens. I don't think you need to be in range of the observer either. This is Point B, except it's not really a point, it's the direction you are facing
For example: I pick a target directly North of me (bearing 0). If I am looking towards 0 when confirmed, the strafe hits from 90->270 on the compass, still on Point A. If I am looking at 180, so I turn around and face backwards, the strafe goes the other way - 270->90.
It's kinda hard to explain, so here's a Paint masterpiece. I call it "Commander tries to kill the fuck out of a box from different angles":
Hope this is useful. I did a fair amount of testing but criticism/corrections welcome!
-
- Admiral of the Fleet
- Posts: 2002
- Joined: Tue Oct 23, 2018 7:30 pm
- 6
- Location: Loughborough
- Contact:
Re: Changing direction of Autocannon
Now I'm confused. I thought it always attacked from the right, no matter what.
Facebook Ebs Spawnsy
Got the SQUEE?
Pick up your suffering and bear it. (J. B. Peterson)
Stay hard. (D. Goggins)
Easy now.
Got the SQUEE?
Pick up your suffering and bear it. (J. B. Peterson)
Stay hard. (D. Goggins)
Easy now.
-
- Vice Admiral
- Posts: 240
- Joined: Wed Oct 24, 2018 9:49 pm
- 6
- Contact:
Re: Changing direction of Autocannon
It still is the right, but it's your right when the strafe is confirmed, not when you call it!
-
- Admiral of the Fleet
- Posts: 2002
- Joined: Tue Oct 23, 2018 7:30 pm
- 6
- Location: Loughborough
- Contact:
Re: Changing direction of Autocannon
Right on.
I practiced with it last night and it seemed to work every time I was able to view the outcome. I have yet to practice the angles with my back turned though. I'm struggling to 'unlearn' the binocular principle and visualise the angle without eyes on the target.
Writing this has helped greatly.
Thanks cold blood and pegleg. Your work is much appreciated and benefits the whole team.
I practiced with it last night and it seemed to work every time I was able to view the outcome. I have yet to practice the angles with my back turned though. I'm struggling to 'unlearn' the binocular principle and visualise the angle without eyes on the target.
Writing this has helped greatly.
Thanks cold blood and pegleg. Your work is much appreciated and benefits the whole team.
Facebook Ebs Spawnsy
Got the SQUEE?
Pick up your suffering and bear it. (J. B. Peterson)
Stay hard. (D. Goggins)
Easy now.
Got the SQUEE?
Pick up your suffering and bear it. (J. B. Peterson)
Stay hard. (D. Goggins)
Easy now.
Create an account or sign in to join the discussion
You need to be a member in order to post a reply
Create an account
Not a member? register to join our community
Members can start their own topics & subscribe to topics
It’s free and only takes a minute