Originally posted by hubsonfire
hence this thread has mostly been a waste of time, except for the few of us who will check his webpage later for the answers to the questions he asked us first. Absolutely silly.
You're never going to get rock solid answers to the question because of all the variables described in this thread... And yes, its been silly, and most everyone is right to some degree.
Yeah, we all know that most guns are good to 500 yards, some slower heavier cannon rounds are like 300ish. Beyond that, even the simple question descends into academics. Is there any quantifiable benifit to knowing that gun type X goes 25 more yards before dropping an additional inch than Gun type Y?
In order to work it out, you need the muzzle velocity, the rate at which a specific projectile decelerates over time, and then you need the constants of gravity (meaning how much is my projectile accellerating toward the ground over time)... When the lines cross, you've got your absolute effective range. And its utterly useless information.
Only HT knows how much detail is in the model.
The useful answer is, almost all guns are great out to 300 and very effective to 500. Beyond that its a crap shoot.
It is further invalidated by the lead angles which get darn hard to figure out beyond about 500 anyhow.
Set the convergence to 275, and don't shoot till you can read the altimeter in the enemy cockpit... Thats all anyone needs to know
