Hi 2bighorn,
>Your definition of a mil wasn't used in ww2. That came later.
>ww2:
>mil equal to 1/1000 right angle, or 0.09° (5.4 moa)
>NATO after ww2:
>mil equal to 1/1600 right angle, or 0.05625° (3.375 moa)
Hm, that would of course overthrow my results for the US guns!
It would also invalidate my weapon dispersion table since it is based on the assumption that the historic dispersion would be expressed in identical units.
However, going back to the old thread, I found that two different definitions were used by the US in WW2, with one being 1/1000 of a right angle, and the other being 1/1000 of a radian, which is exactly the 0.0573° of the 1/1000 of range definition.
(The Germans used the fraction of range definition, too, and I would be suprised if the US weapons had that much more dispersion.)
So I'll continue to use the 0.0573° for now, but I'll keep my eyes peeled for an example where range and deviation are named in absolute figures so we can cross-check it!
Regards,
Henning (HoHun)