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![]() This could be the answer to the question with which I opened this thread. But we must be cautious. Some remarks: - For an OAT = -2ºC @ 4000 m, the OAT @MSL should be 24ºC. In the vanilla version there are only 2 maps that meet that condition: Kuban and Bessarabia. And there is not maps with 35ºC @ MSL. So I assume you've used one of those maps, or any map of 25ºC (the difference of OAT at 4000 m would be negligible anyway). - It seems you are repeating some of my tests, and extracting the same conclusions than me. But also you should test if for you TALT works with other very different maps (i.e.: Gulf of Finland_winter -20ºC @MSL and flying at altitudes above 5000 m). As far as I tested, TALT doesn't confirm that outcome with colder maps. - "Target or miss" may be defined in many ways. "Target destroyed" may be one way. "Hit at less than xxxx meters" may be other. I don't know what you're using, and it is important to know if we are describing results in the same way. In my tests I used the ring target and considered "target" any hit within the limits of the external ring. Sometimes I've achieved direct impacts in the centre of the ring... but I considered them as a part of the "good luck factor". - BTW, also I was testing the blast radius of different Russian bombs, and it seems they are well modeled. Is far as I can recall, a pair of 100 kg bombs have a blast radius of 40 m; a pair of 250 kg, around 80 m; a pair of 500 kg, around 120 m; a 1000 kg bomb, 140 m; a 1500 kg, around 200 m. More tests are needed with these and other bombs; but I think the blast radius are close to the real. All tests were made in open and flat terrain, using Willys as targets, covering a square of 200 x 200 m. I discovered a curious effect: sometimes some nearest target was not destroyed, while the farest were KIA... like if certain random effect appears. ![]() Please: Carry on some tests with colder maps to see if the TALT works for you, and let me know your data and outcomes. |
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