Clock Range: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with ''''Plot Range''' is the range to the target at any given moment. This is distinct from gun range, which is the range entered on the gunsights and which accounts fo…')
 
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'''Plot Range''' is the range to the target at any given moment.  This is distinct from [[Gun Range|gun range]], which is the range entered on the gunsights and which accounts for the change in range during the [[Time-of-Flight|time-of-flight]] of the projectile.
'''Plot Range''' is the range to the target at any given moment.  This is distinct from [[Gun Range|gun range]], which is the range entered on the gunsights and which accounts for the change in range during the [[Time-of-Flight|time-of-flight]] of the projectile.


The difference between clock range and gun range was regarded as so fundamental that the Royal Navy saw fit to ensure that their [[Dreyer Fire Control Tables]] were adapted to plot both values clearly by use of separate pencils on their range plots.  The difference between the two values in the Royal Navy was expressed as a [[Straddle Correction|''straddle correction'']] and [[Spotting Correction|spotting corrections]] entered into the [[Spotting Corrector]] of a Dreyer table.
The difference between clock range and gun range was regarded as so fundamental that the Royal Navy saw fit to ensure that their [[Dreyer Fire Control Table]]s were adapted to plot both values clearly by use of separate pencils on their range plots.  The difference between the two values in the Royal Navy was expressed as a [[Straddle Correction|straddle correction']] and [[Spotting|spotting corrections]] entered into the [[Spotting Corrector]] of a Dreyer table.


==See Also==
==See Also==

Revision as of 02:16, 4 September 2009

Plot Range is the range to the target at any given moment. This is distinct from gun range, which is the range entered on the gunsights and which accounts for the change in range during the time-of-flight of the projectile.

The difference between clock range and gun range was regarded as so fundamental that the Royal Navy saw fit to ensure that their Dreyer Fire Control Tables were adapted to plot both values clearly by use of separate pencils on their range plots. The difference between the two values in the Royal Navy was expressed as a straddle correction' and spotting corrections entered into the Spotting Corrector of a Dreyer table.

See Also

Footnotes

Bibliography