
Night Combat Questions
#1
Posted 30 November 2008 - 07:59 AM
#2
Posted 30 November 2008 - 08:42 PM
This is partly correct; re-acquisition is not necessary once a target formation (or target ship, if it’s a single ship) has been acquired. A target will cease to be acquired once the range has opened beyond the maximum sighting range (not just beyond the acquisition range band) or the line of sight has been blocked (by an intervening ship, land mass, rain squall, etc.).What this represents is the tendency to be able to keep an object in view once it has been acquired and recognized, even if the range is beyond what the acquisition range would be if the object were to be newly acquired. (We’ve all experienced this phenomenon, especially on a pitch-black night.)1. My understanding is that detection/acquisition for each division is not re-rolled every game turn. Once an enemy division is visually acquired by a friendly division(or radar detected) it remains so as long as it remains in the range band that was orginally rolled for it during the detection phase and this number should recorded. Is that correct?
First, you may want to download the Amendment 1 updates (available free in the download section) as some of the acquisition ranges have changed slightly. Amendment 1 was brought out after the first year to tweak certain aspects of the tables and percentages and is based on a years worth of feedback from the gaming community (think of it as refining the game). They’re not necessary, however, to play the game, as most of the changes are minor.Since your example is based on the original tables (the ones that come with rules), we’ll use those to answer your question. Basically, you’re correct; but to be sure, let’s run through the examples.Ok, you have a USN force attempting to acquire an IJN force that has fired. The conditions are quarter moon (Qtr Moon). First, you’ll need to measure the range; let’s assume its 7500 yds. Next, since 7500 yds is in the 8000 yds column, you would use this column with the Qtr Moon row. The resulting normal probability for sighting the IJN force would be ‘1-8’ but, since the IJN has fired, you shift the probability 2 columns to the left (the 4000 yds column), which results in an ‘Acquired’ (or automatic) result. Now, since you rolled a 7, you would’ve sighted the IJN force at 7500 yds, firing or not, since the normal probability of acquiring the target is 1-8 (of course, if you had rolled a 9+, then you wouldn’t have seen them, which might be bad for you, especially if the IJN player is settling up a torpedo attack!). Ok, now let’s assume the range is 11500 yds (all other conditions the same). Now you’re on the 12000 yds column, which has a normal probability of 1-5. Since the IJN fired, you would shift 2 columns to the left and use the probability from the 8000 yds column (1-8). With your 7 roll, you would acquire the IJN. (And, of course, if the IJN hadn’t fired, you wouldn’t have acquired the IJN target since you need 1-5).In all cases, you shift the probability of acquiring the target, not the range. And the determining factor for acquisition is the range to the target since all acquisition is done from one sighting ship to one target ship (or formation).2. I am confused by the column shifts on the Dark Acquisition table. As an example, let's say there is a Qtr Moon and a roll of 7 is made on the U.S. Dark Acquisition table. This player is attempting to acquire (or switch targets) a Japanese force that has fired. Gun flashes shift two columns to the left. That is where my confusion lies. A basic 7 roll acquires a target out to 8,000 yds. If I switch two columns Left I'm either at 4,000 yds for the range or if you mean shift the result only then the target is automatically acquired. If I go by the result only does that mean that I move the 7 result also out two columns to the RIGHT (i.e. to 16,000 yds for a 7 roll).
Correct. What you have here is the flagship passing the sighting report ‘down the line’ to the other division ships, thereby making them aware of the target. To fire on another target (other than the one closest to the flag), each ship would have to acquire that separate target. What this represents is the tendency for all ships in a division to open up on the closest sighted ship instead of switching to other targets further away (and make better use of their firepower). This over concentration on the closest target was a very common problem in night actions (especially for those not extensively trained in night combat, such as the USN in the early Solomons night battles; the IJN, being much more highly trained in night combat rarely made this error). If you have any other questions or have any follow-up on this, please feel free to ask away (that’s what we’re here for!).3. The way I read it is that when an enemy division is visually acquired, all ships of the friendly division automatically acquire for targeting purposes the closest enemy vessel to the flagship. But ALL enemy ships in that division are acquired visually. So to switch targets the player must roll on the Dark Acquisition table and roll within the initial acquistion range band to successfully switch. Again column shifts may come into play. Is this correct?
#3
Posted 01 December 2008 - 09:27 AM
#4
Posted 27 March 2010 - 08:28 AM
#5
Posted 15 April 2010 - 06:41 PM
#6
Posted 19 April 2010 - 08:04 AM
#7
Posted 19 April 2010 - 12:59 PM
#8
Posted 21 April 2010 - 06:29 PM
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