Time-of-Flight

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Revision as of 02:03, 4 September 2009 by Tone (talk | contribs) (moved Time-of-flight to Time-of-Flight: our standard for capitalisation)
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Time-of-flight is a period of time between a gun's discharge and the impact of the projectile against land, sea, or other object.

Generally, time-of-flight is considered as that when a shell would strike the water, as in all but the shortest range firings the abbreviation of a projectile's flight by hitting a vessel before it reaches the water is meager indeed, and in all cases the distinction is largely mooted by the fact that you hit the target and time would be better spent sipping port rather than discussing technicalities of fire control.

Due to aerodynamic drag, time-of-flight generally increases more and more quickly as range increases.