In most situations the gunsight is never spot on. In fact (and I believe you know this already) it's only spot on while flying straight and level and your target is precisely at convergence.
Still it's a good guideline to approximately where your bullets should fly. It doesn't really lie, it tells a half-truth.
If you generally ignore your sight, how do you know where you should be shooting? I don't take my sight as "gospel" but at least I know within a few degrees where my bullets will fly. When you shoot, you must have your front view down solid with no side to side movement (ie from TrackIR or mouse look)?
I'm actually curious. I haven't checked your stats, but I trust what you say about your percentage. How exactly do you achieve those stats essentially ignoring the sight? Is this something I should try myself? I personally find it hard to judge lead on "under the nose shots", should I now be able to set my forward view so the "pilot's seat" is as high as possible so the sight isn't anywhere to be seen?
I don't pay much attention to the sight, except on the "easy" shots- going away in a slight bank, "hanging" in front of me, etc. Even then, I generally don't actively aim much with the sight, I just realize that the sight is actually happens to be lined up "for this shot, this time". On many shots I may not even be able to see the target when I fire (he's under my nose), or I'll fire before he's even in my forward view enough to use the sight (crossing fast from the side, or overshooting me with a lot of speed). Lots of shots are taken before he even enters my bulletproof glass although he's in my forward view. He’s headed toward my sight, but not in it yet…
To say I essentially ignore the sight doesn't mean it isn't lined up correctly with the target- it has to be, or I'd miss. It's a very similar feeling to when I shoot shotgun. The gun is up to my shoulder, and the barrel is lined up with my eye, which means the bead is as well. But I don't focus on the bead when I fire, my attention is riveted on the bird or clay target.
The vast majority of
my shooting in AH is what I consider "shotgun style", with just a bit of "rifle style" thrown in here and there. Those tracking shots where the enemy is flying a predictable path long enough for me to carefully line up my sights, decide the proper lead, and execute the shot are "rifle style" in my mind. Other examples are the previously mentioned "hanging" shots. On rifle-type shots, I look at the sight, and line it up with my target. These type of shots occur probably 1 or 2 fights in 10 for me.
Most of my aerial gunnery has more in common with shotgunning (and in particular, skeet shooting and pass shooting), than it does with rifle shooting. When using a shotgun correctly, the target is in crisp, attentive focus, and the gun (including the sights) is an indistinct blur. Becoming distracted by the sights causes you to miss, because it draws your attention to the gun, and away from the target. The gun should be a "vaguely outlined pointer", and all attention should be on the target, calculating its speed, angle, and the required lead. In shotgunning, you make a conscious effort NOT to look at or focus on the sights, but instead, concentrate so hard on the target that you try to “read the writing” on it. I use the same technique when I shoot aerial or running targets with a bow or rifle.
In shotgunning, ignoring the sights is, in essence, vital to a good score.Care is taken to ensure that mounting the gun is done properly, without canting it, and so your eye lines up with the barrel. I can close my eyes, mount my gun, and open my eyes, and it's mounted correctly every time. That's the tough part in shotgunning. Not having that "down pat" will cause serious issues. That part is already taken care of in AH.
I transition that idea right into my shooting in AH. Focus HARD on the target, and just try to forget about the sights at all. Of course they're lined up with my eye, and will be lined up with the target, I just don’t actively pay attention to it. If I give it a conscious thought, it’s to tell myself not to look at it. Flying the plane just takes the place of swinging the shotgun.
I think this answers your question about the "more comprehensive gunsight" boomerlu? The last thing
I want is a sight that distracts me enough that I look at it!
Visual feedback by itself isn’t what I want/need. I want the feedback of the tracers, but that doesn’t mean I want feedback from a more elaborate sight. What could it possibly tell me that I don’t already know? Range? I have the icon counter, and fire on targets when they’re big enough to hit. Bank angle? I can see that… And if the ground isn’t level (mountains…) or if no ground (or only ground) is visible, it won’t be accurate anyway. Calculate lead? LOL, nope! Calculate angle-off? I can already see that… The tracers tell me RIGHT NOW where my judgment erred, and therefore gives me the answer I need to correct. The sight doesn’t. Even if it’s fancy. If I aim high and miss, what does the sight tell me that I don’t already know. Nothing… I aimed high, and missed. Conversely, if I aim high and miss, the tracers tell me where my judgment was off… And it’s not like I have to go out and watch my tracers actively either. I only pay attention to them when I need a question answered.
And again, using a sight like that would distract me and force me to switch my attention between the sight and the plane, comparing the relationship. In my case, it would hurt me more than help me. I know, because I went through the “looking for the best sight” phase in my early experience too. I always ignored the one I think is best, because it wasn’t fancy enough.
Given the choice, if I had to use only one I'd keep the tracers and get rid of the sight. For some reason, the 109K4 didn’t have a sight when I used it for training in the TA. Not having the sight didn’t cause me any problems, even though I don’t think I’ve ever flown that plane in the MA.
Back in the days when I did ground attack, I did like some of the sights that supposedly helped with rockets, even though I never really felt they helped that much.
Zoom? I seldom use it for shooting, but I often flicker it on/off when I want a better look at my opponent. One time I'll use if for firing is on an opponent at D600, and running. I don't like it on for shooting because it messes up my mental image of the correct lead for the shot. With zoom on, I feel like I have enough lead, but I don't. I might also use it on those "hanging" shots, where my opponent is against a background that makes it tough for me to see him. He isn't moving much relative to me, so doesn't require much lead. One of those "rifle-type" shots again...