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Reason for offset German sights?
Based upon what I can see in the cockpits there doesnt seem to be any practical reason why the German planes have their sights over to the right.
There definitely dont seem to be any ergonomic benefits. Anyone know the reason for this? |
look at your controls section, there is button for moving the head forward- back, moving forward will bring the sight to the middle.
The reason (as far as I know, correct me if Im wrong) in real life was that the sight was positioned so that it was directly in front of right eye, so that the pilot did not have to move his head to aim. CH |
Thanks Kurkio, got the shift-F1 thing undercontrol.
I was mainly interested in the R/L reasons for the offset. Your explanation that it was to put the sight in front of the right eye sounds reasonable, but the offset appears to be significantly more than would account for that. Also, as humans have binocular vision I dont see any real benefit to having it directly in front of the right eye only. In fact I can see it being a disadvantage to those whose left eye is stronger. |
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I doubt he would be a pilot then at all. :rolleyes: |
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But back to real life most Luftwaffe gun sights are off set to the right, theory being it gave a better view when flying normally which accounted for 90% of most fighter missions anyway, the Me109, Fw190 He219 Me262 and Me163 are all off set to the right. The other theory is the right eye theory which does not hold much water in MHO. |
Sorry...this is off topic but I had to post it. I was reading this thread and thought I'd try a little research. I entered into Google "German revi sight offset" and stumbled across this...LOL
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Besides the fanboy talk, there's some rumor getting more substantive: CFS3 is coming and its the most probable reason for the information war going on between CFS and BoB. |
I just think it's hilarious as that was posted back in 2002 :lol:
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Hello von G.
The Revi was offset to the right to gain a better forward view. To aim correctly it was sufficient to close the left eye. |
So it's off to the side to give an unobstructed view and for right eye aiming?
Any sources on this? I have to wonder, if putting the sights off to the right like that was such a good idea, why didnt any other airforces do it? |
Sources, in books yes. Maybe you can find something on the web.
Why didn't other airforces think of this? Frankly I don't know. If you ask me, it's one of those oddities of german engineering ;) (I am german myself)....this is not the only one btw. They had also other stuff in the cockpit noone esle had that way. |
OK I may have found an explanation in the most unlikely place, a patent for the target reticle on telescopic sights believe it or not, but I am still not a 100% convinced this why the sights are offset. :-?
Source: http://www.wipo.int/pctdb/en/wo.jsp?...7&DISPLAY=DESC Quote:
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Hmm...
That's interesting but it seems to be describing the offset of the projectiles nose, rather than the sight. It seems the right eye thing, and keeping the view of the nose open are the best potential answers, although frankly neither one seems like an especially strong reason. Maybe as KOM.nausicaa says, the germans just feel a need to be different! Quote:
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I thought the pilot had the option to mount the sight on the left if that was his dominant eye?
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Hello von G,
still not convinced yet I see ;) To understand why the gunsight can be offset to one side it is important to understand reflector sights first. There are several good articles on the web about this. About the REVI 16, there is a good article here on the german site Luftarchiv. http://www.luftarchiv.de/index.htm?h...te/optisch.htm "Das Reflexvisier ist ein optisches Visiergerät für starr in Flugzeuge eingebaute MG's, kann aber auch auf einem fest mit dem beweglichen MG verbundenen Aufsatz eingesetzt werden. Das Bild der Zielmarke wird durch ein Projektionssystem in der Zielebene abgebildet und wir somit gleichzeitig mit dem Ziel ohne Akkomodation scharf gesehen; kleine Bewegungen des Auges stören nicht, solange das Auge in dem die Zielmarke abbildenden Strahlenbündel sich befindet. Die Zielmarke selbst ist leuchtend; die Helligkeit kann der des Zieles angepasst werden. Die Lage und der Bildwinkel der aus einem leuchtenden Kreis mit eingesetzten Zielstacheln bestehenden Zielmarke sind unabhängig von dem Augenort: seitliche Verschiebungen des Auges oder eine zu große Entfernung vom Zielgerät bewirken lediglich ein abschneiden des Kreises, der die Größe der Vorhaltung angibt" I will translate the last sentence: "The position and the angle of view of the target marker representing a illuminated circle with integrated target pointers are independent of the position of the eyes: lateral changements of the eye-position, or a too great distance towards the gunsight will only cut off the circle..." You also have to understand that IL2 (as many other flightsims) gives a poor representation of how close the head of the pilot towards the instrument panel actually was, and how tiny the cockpit was: http://home.arcor.de/nsu-binder/nsu-...w190/fw190.htm Considering how the reflective gunsight REVI (Reflektions Visier) works, the head of the pilot was always inside the cone of projection of the gunsight. It was thus very easy, by leaning forward, turning the head a little to the right, or closing the left eye, to get a full view through the REVI. : http://old.messerschmitt-bf109.de/ph...pit-bf109b.php You can see in the upper link the construction plan for the instrument panel. The gunsight cut-out isnt that far offset as you might think. You can also see that it's position is already foreseen. There is thus no possibility to set it to the left, as far as I am aware. Hope this helps :) |
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But the thing that doesn't convince me of this idea being reason for offsetting the gun sight, is that I think the effect of this drift on weapons with a convergence of 300m or even 500m would be very minimal, and also the fact that allied planes had the sight in the centre. I'm leaning towards KOM.Nausicaa descriptions. |
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Love your pics of the 190 pit though. Is that you, and which museum is that? Would love a chance to sit in a FW myself! |
No it isnt me, just something I found on the web.
It is the Aircraft Museum Hannover Laatzen in Germany. |
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