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IL-2 Sturmovik: Cliffs of Dover Latest instalment in the acclaimed IL-2 Sturmovik series from award-winning developer Maddox Games. |
View Poll Results: Acccuracy and preference for moded vs current tracers | |||
I think we should immediately use the "new" tracers. |
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19 | 14.18% |
I think with some more work the "new" tracers should be used. |
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50 | 37.31% |
Indifferent to the tracer effects/possible effects. |
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35 | 26.12% |
I like the current tracers. |
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30 | 22.39% |
Voters: 134. You may not vote on this poll |
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#91
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The tracers in game do not look realistic, Syn_Bliss. For a start there are far too many, there is no (faint) smoke trail, and the recoil does not effect the trajectory as it should. the result is that each tracer round follows almost an identical path to the previos one and among other obvious things from gun camera footage (I already agreed that the wobble is down to camera shake) there is a much greater spread when these guns are fired.
Now you may berate me and say I have no real life experience on this matter, however, your real life experience comes from firing modern weapons with modern ammunition, on modern weapon mountings, please correct me if I'm wrong on this (I am assuming) - Therefore your view on how the tracers should look is flawed also. There are other things that can affect the rounds - tumbling and so forth - that can cause the odd round to fly off in an unexpected trajectory, even spiralling through the air (yes I know very rarely but..) Remember that the guns you fire most likely have a much higher muzzle velocity & rate of fire than these antiquated WWII weapons, causing straighter trajectories, longer looking tracers, etc. Chemicals and methods used for tracer have surely been changed and refined in the time since 1945. - Less smoke, brighter, less deviation compared to normal rounds etc... You have already stated that rounds fired from your point of view look like a dot, no? so when in game they look like a streak something is wrong. Watch Yellnets linked video to see the spread effect I am on about, aswell as the fewer number of actual tracer rounds, and the smoke trails. The camera is not creating these effects now is it. |
#92
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Especially for you chaps.
I think the tracers are fine as they are. This is max 480p, my upload speed is hopeless. Notice the showers of sparks as the Heinkels are hit also. Very cool. |
#93
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If you set a video camera to record with that shutter speed it should result in video that shows approximately what one would see in person. |
#94
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The light's / candle reference is relevant, it's a moving light source, same as a tracer round. I have always said that they don't follow the correct path, and they dont. I don't heed your experience because you are 100% wrong in what you say. Are you a WW2 fighter pilot? No. So by your own rule you can't comment on this. An inescapeable truth is that CoD draws light in where it has never been. No matter what you say, this is the case. I can prove it. You prove that I'm wrong if you are so confident. I know more about physics than you do otherwise you would not be arguing. How many times do I have to say that I don't need any experience of firing tracers, I just need to understand cause and effect and be able to plot a bullets path relative to the viewer. That is all. CoD draws 3D tracer streaks when in fact they are 2D. It's this that causes the difference between RL and CoD. End Of. |
#95
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I'm not bashing CoD, I'm not arguing for 'my' way. I'm just pointing out a subtle difference between RL and video game tracer. Thanks for posting it. Any chance you could make it available to download? |
#96
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i agree with the eyes having fps ive experienced an stroboscopic effect in real life
in fact some pilots would use the stroboscopic effect to adjust prop rpm but you should know mainstream science disagrees with that its called persistence of vision ![]() http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persistence_of_vision
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3gb ram ASUS Radeon EAH4650 DI - 1 GB GDDR2 I PREFER TO LOVE WITHOUT BEING LOVED THAT NOT LOVE AT ALL |
#97
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No kidding about the 2d and 3d thing. That's the 1st thing I said about the hardware limitations. But by all means, please show me your way to PROVE how it's soo wrong. Can't wait for your science. And I highly doubt you know more about physics than me considering I have a BSME from Rose Hulman. Again, it's as if the ENTIRE conversation has gone over your head and I'm done discussing it with an imbecile. |
#98
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Sorry Winny, I wouldn't know how! I suppose you could use fraps to capture it whilst in full screen mode, but the quality isn't too good for that.
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#99
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2ndly the guns were more firmly fixed in warbirds than any modern day turret. I've fired about every single variant of machine gun ever made. The .50 has been around since early 1900's. That's a moot point. If someone was aiming the machine guns on a stationary plane and test firing them through a target and you had bullets flying all over the place on that target board, you have some serious weapon problems. They will maintain a certain radius for each weapon fired, and if you think you can physically see the changes in this small radius while firing, you wouldn't be human. I'm not disagreeing that there are too many tracers, but again, that is not the point of this topic. As far as the dot thing goes, when you have an offset (guns are on either side of you converging) that's when you'll see streaks of light, and guess what?.., with wing mounted machine guns, they are heavily offset from your POV. All the physics in the world does not change how they appear simply because you are not calculating in the fact that you are flying and maintaining the same speed and distance as the weapons themselves on the plane. You might as well be standing still. That's why the rounds start arcing to the eye under extreme forces. And this is evident in game. |
#100
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Soo wrong? It's either wrong or it's right. Now you're also getting sarcastic. If the path of the dot of light (relative to the viewer) is curved then the streak must also be curved. Put your BSME into practice and demonstrate to me how what is essentially a continuous curved line that fades away can leave repeated straight lines that don't point to where they came from behind it? |
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