from the research ive done, is that if you fly on exactly the same vector for 20s there is a good chance you should get puffy ack around you. if you keep going on that vector, the chances of you taking damage rise. if you're flying towards the radar, the chances rise further.
if you do even the simplest evasives (and we are talking out of effective manual tracking range here, so no kentucky windage) there is no way you can be tracked. its just impossible given the resolution of the radar and the consequent operating delay from the director.
Well then untwist yer panties for half a second and share your intensive research instead of throwing out your 1:100,000,000 chance of getting hit by the entire complement of naval task force AAA firing at your single inbound aircraft claim and having a ball-eyed hissy fit about how unfair AHII is to you. I can stand to be corrected if you can stand to do it.
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A tachymetric anti-aircraft fire control system refers to a method of generating target position, speed, direction, and rate of target range change, by computing these parameters directly from measured data.[1] The target's range, height and observed bearing data is fed into a computer which uses the measured change in range, height and bearing from successive observations of the target to compute the true range, direction, speed and rate of climb or descent of the target. The computer then calculates the required elevation and bearing of the AA guns to hit the target based upon its predicted movement.
The computers were at first entirely mechanical analog computers utilizing gears and levers to physically perform the calculations of protractors and slide rules, using moving graph charts and markers to provide an estimate of speed and position. Variation of target position over time was accomplished with constant-drive motors to run the mechanical simulation.
The term tachymetric should more properly be spelled as "tachometric"[2] which comes from the Greek "takhos" = speed, and "metric" = measure, hence tachometric, to measure speed.
An alternative, non-tachometric, gonometric [3][4] method of AA prediction is for specially trained observers to manually estimate the course and speed of the target and feed these estimates, along with the measured bearing and range data, into the AA fire control computer which then generates change of bearing rate, and change of range data, and passes it back to the observer, typically by a "follow the pointer", indicator of predicted target elevation and bearing or by remote power control of the observer's optical instruments.[5] The observer then corrects the estimate, creating a feed back loop, by comparing the observed target motion against the computer generated motion of his optical sights. When the sights stay on the target, the estimated speed, range, and change of rate data can be considered correct.[6]
An example of tachometric AA fire control would be the USN Mk 37 system. The early RN High Angle Control System (HACS) I through IV and the early Fuze Keeping Clock (FKC) were examples of non-tachometric systems.[7]
By 1940 the RN was adding a Gyro Rate Unit (GRU)[8] which fed bearing and elevation data to a Gyro Rate Unit Box computer (GRUB), which also received ranging data to then directly calculate target speed and direction, and this tachometric data was then fed directly to the HACS fire control computer, converting the HACS into a tachometric system.[9]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tachymetric_anti-aircraft_fire_control_systemhttp://sydney.edu.au/engineering/it/research/tr/tr223.pdf - specifically pages 10 -22 aaa (page 16 on specifically for naval aaa)
http://pwencycl.kgbudge.com/A/n/Antiaircraft.htmhttp://www.history.navy.mil/library/online/antiaircraft_action_summary_wwii.htm#III (page 9)
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The above would be a good example of sharing info regarding subject matter instead of wetting ones pants and shaking a virtual fist or giving a virtual glare.