I just wanted to make sure people realized what I was talking about with wind drift:
Setup. took off in Ki-67, climbed to around 14K and set the auto-pilot. No wind. Calibrated the sight and got a mark. Had jabo sight on to see actual point of impact of bomb. Course was mostly due west (265) at 13,957ft. I left it on auto-pilot from this point on, through the entire test the altitude changed by 1 ft and heading was absolutely constant.
Scenario 1: no wind. I didn't bother to take a photo. no change in alt or direction. I did this to calibrate the sight and had it calibrated pretty well though the bomb impact point was pretty near the top of the + sign. Bombs would have fallen a tiny bit short, but whatever since this was just the standard.
Scenario 2: winds from 8K and up, south, set at 50 (though the speed shows as 73). The instant the wind was changed the sight moved. I didn't recalibrate. This should indicate that the wind pushes the bomb off sight, as expected, because the bomb will fall through almost 6K of wind.
Scenario 3: wind from sea-level and up, south, set at 50. The impact point didn't change from Scenario 2 indicating that the game thinks the drift should be exactly the same even though this bomb is falling through 8K more wind force (14K total). That's clearly wrong as the extended time in the wind should have pushed the bomb more off course.
Attached is a pic, blended them together but tried to label them. Same zoom level, exactly, and placed the calibrated aim points on same axis so that you could see the calculated aim point stays constant.
What this means... it means drift is calculated once and is the same for any alt over the wind start point. Bombs dropped above this point all the drift the same amount regardless of how many ft of wind they pass though.
This is good and bad. If the wind layer is at 14K, then a calibration at 13,999ft is totally inaccurate if you crossed into 14,001ft (or whenever you hit the layer barrier). If bombing you should always make sure you bomb from a bit under then so you don't risk crossing by accident. On the good side, drift is the same, once there is drift, all the way up regardless of how many ft of altitude the bomb has to fall through.
I tried this once before and got the same results so it didn't surprise me that it's the same now. It isn't how you percieve it should be, but once you know it you can work with it.
-Soda
The Assassins.