There has been a previous post about the use of the different crosshairs we have in the 8" cruiser guns. I posted and asked if somebody knew if the grey crosshair was really mils and if it could be used to range a cv with it. I didn't receive any answers yet so I went and did my experiments to see if it really works. Well it does. Let me explain you how you can range and hit a cv with a very good probability of first shot hits.
First thing you need to know is how mils are used to range targets. I won't get into this too much and you can research it yourself but it's a system created by the military to find the specific range of the target so you can engage it accurately. What you need to know to start to do the math is the specific size of the target or something close to a target that you want to engage. For this specific example here it would be the size of the cv. Since the cv can move on angles, the length of it can vary so using this won't be good. One thing that stays the same though is the height of it. It doesn't matter which direction the cv is going, the height will always be the same. Now when I was testing this, I realized after you hit the cv once, the tower explodes or whatever and you can't see the top of it because of the flame like in the picture. With my testing, I found that the height of the cv from the water to the flat top section of where the red arrow is pointing is 40.6 meters.
So here is the formula Meters/Yards x 1000 / Mils = your target range in meters or yards depending on the one u used.
If you look at the picture. The grey crosshairs is horizontal to the water (black arrow) so you can count the lines going up and see that it's very close to the 5 mils line (blue arrow)
So if you do the math with this info. 40.6(meters) x 1000 = 40600 Then 40600/ 5mils= 8120 meter. So 8.1k away. Fire
Like it did in the picture-------> went boom. First shot hits.
Now those are the ranges with the specific amount of mils 2 mils= 20.3k
2.5 = 16.2k
3 = 13.5k
3.5 = 11.6k
4.0 = 10k
4.5 = 9k
5 = 8.1k
The better you are at milranging, the more accurate you can be. I only used those numbers because engaging at 20k is kinda max effective range. You can use the same formula to divide them into smaller mil reading, 1/4 or better. It's even more important at longer range. Example 2.5 mils and 3 mils. might be small but it's still 3k of difference
Now the yellow indicator is for the lead. You have to try it out and have a feel of the lead you need. In this example, my cv was going the same direction as the nme one and fired at that specific location and got a mid ship hits.
So that is what I was able to accomplish playing with it. If anybody has any questions or comments. I'll try to help
Black70