Do you live in the US?
Is the loft for the C accurate. This missile feels like a complete downgrade
It’s missing a smokeless motor and can’t hit its max range (neither can). Just gaijin being gaijin…
The Fakour really killed the phoenix. Before the IRIAF, even in an uptier, climbing to spam 6 phoenix and going back to base was a viable tactic but now you don’t have time to guide them with datalink before eating a Fakour - you have to leave them in IOG which combined to the terrible maneuverability means a certain miss. It is now outclassed at short, medium and long range. At least the F-14B can be fun in a dogfight and the improved rwr is always a big + but the US F-14A has been made largely obsolete imo.
F-14D with amraam can’t come soon enough.
Since when did they not meet the maximum range? Even without the efficient lofting they meet the maximum range launch scenario with the correct loft height elevation and everything.
Does it? I co I’lld have sworn last I checked it doesn’t. Then again, it was a long time ago I checked, so maybe it did change. I thought it had excessive drag or something like poor lofting that was preventing it from reaching its maximum speed and range.
The missile is tailored to fit the absolute maximum launch range scenario, and as such is actually SEVERELY overperforming at low altitudes. A modified efficient loft would exacerbate the issue further.
Most likely not. The loft on both AIM-54’s appears to be based on a single shot out to 110NM made with the AIM-54A. The AIM-54C has an all new guidance section capable of more advanced and optimized trajectories to improve hit probability vs small agile targets (ie: more terminal velocity).
The problem is, besides everything pointing to improved guidance capabilities for the AIM-54C, we dont have the EXACT numbers, so gaijin isn’t ever going to do anything about it. The 54C is doomed to forever be trash in WT.
Well if you can, file a FOIA request for this section from the SARs FY 1989, SARs FY 1990, and SARs FY 1991, it has max range and target altitude:
Incoming @MiG_23M claiming “these are all falsified and PSYOP” …
Also the launch weight is currently 1020.74 lb.
According to this they achieved 1018 lb in 1989 with a estimate for further weight reduction to 1014 lb. (which might have been possibly actualized, if someone manages to FOIA the FY 1990 and FY 1991 reports).
This is for ECCM/Sealed variant, but I don’t see why the in-game AIM-54C shouldn’t be assumed to be the ECCM/Sealed variant (and get all its improvements).
These are the numbers permissible for public distribution, not the real world numbers or tactical launch weight.
At the time of publishing the actual tactical weight of these missiles was still classified - the real numbers are redacted and the fake ones are not. It’s simple.
Practices like these began after initial problems with information leakage occurred with the AIM-54A. It is what spurred the Outsider’s view of the awg-9 / phoenix weapon system document.
I might give it a shot, though max range of the 54C wouldnt necessarily help us in determining a more accurate loft profile for the missile. When I tested various loft profiles for the AIM-54C, the general trend was that an improvement in terminal intercept velocity generally resulted in a mild increase in time to target as a negative as well (as the missiles path was longer, but spent in thinner air for more of it).
The 110nmi shot our AIM-54A/C in-game are based on technically do reach, and do appear to hit the max alt achieved by the 54A in the test shot, but reach right as the missiles battery runs out, its entirely possible that in exchange for improved performance across its most likely envelope, the missile had a reduction in absolute range.
As it currently stands, the AIM-54A is, afaik, the only missile in-game with a quasi-accurate loft profile, and this is ONLY because we have data on a test shot that gives quite a bit more detail than typically found, between launch speed, target speed, intercept range, launch range, target and launch alt, and max missile alt. THAT’s what I was referring to when I said “we don’t have the EXACT numbers”.
We know the guidance section and control sections were completely replaced, with the new WGU-11/B digital guidance section replacing the old analogue one, and the WCU-7/B replacing the old control section. We know this was done to allow for more optimized trajectory shaping for the missile, which we know was done to improve performance vs small and highly agile targets, but we dont have exact numbers on the loft trajectory, which makes it hard to bug report, and effectively impossible to argue with gaijin regarding improving the loft/guidance code.
Gaijin devs are already incredibly questionable when it comes to proper implementation of western systems with MULTIPLE primary sources (such as the infamous MANPAD situation), trying to get them to improve a missile one or more devs clearly have a significant bias against is effectively impossible as it stands, and I sorta doubt the documents you suggested would really improve that either.
As for considering the in-game 54C an ECCM/Sealed variant, idk if thats really relevant either. Afaik, beyond the fact the missile didnt need external cooling anymore, the ECCM/Sealed variant allegedly had further improvements to the seeker. Gaijin already refuses to model the current 54C seeker any differently than the 54A (with the 54A’s seeker likely overperforming in the first place as it can go active without the aircraft telling it to), so I dont see much reason in trying to get them to model it as the final variant when they couldnt be bothered to model any of the variants right in the first place…
Worthless magazine, am I right?
LOL
I just found it interesting piece of history as it reflects the Soviet’s perspective on the missile.
Did I say we should use it for a bug report?
Though there is nothing inherently wrong with using it for a bug report. It’s still a secondary source.
Yes, if it says something that conflicts with primary sources, then that piece of information is incorrect / unusable.
But if a secondary source makes a claim that is not contradicted by primary sources then it’s a usable source (though you would need 2 secondary sources for a report).
Bug report:
AIM-54A/C & Fakour-90 incorrect antenna beam width:
https://community.gaijin.net/issues/p/warthunder/i/INPP9O0uE8g7/
Thats level of US predictions on mig-29
So it isnt actually
It says “according to foreign press”.
And as I said, I’m not using it for a report … Just found it interesting …
I posted something incredibly similar a long time ago, unfortunately of no use for bug reporting, but does at least confirm that all the assumptions made such as:
- New and much more advanced homing head = better homing head
- New and much more advance guidance section = better guidance
are at least based in reality despite what gaijin says…
I do wonder why none of the guidance section code failed to get touched with the C given that was half of it’s claim to fame upon introduction.
Would be interesting to see how it would preform with say the AIM-120A’s guidance section code compared to the stock phoenix code.
A. Cuz they’re lazy
B. Cuz they have some weird unexplained and unfounded hatred for the AIM-54 for some reason
C. All of the above
Modifying the AIM-54’s guidance code and including energy management code (something all radar missiles above 12.0 have EXCEPT the AIM-54) and a better loft trajectory doesnt really change time to target much, but substantially improves speed at range, as seen below:
Keep in mind, none of these are the AIM-120 loft trajectory, all of the loft codes tested here were made by me except IMPL, made by Dark_Claw. EM is however the AIM-54C’s in-game guidance and loft code, with the only change being I added the energy management section from the AIM-120A, and it showed a minor improvement right off the bat.
The annoying part being that as can be seen above, improved loft codes dont particularly affect the AIM-54 at any ranges except the long ranges, at which all it does is provide less warning when missile goes pitbull, and more energy for the missile to maneuver at ranges you’d EXPECT the missile to be used… so its not really like improved loft codes would suddenly make the AIM-54C broken, it would just have a larger effective firing envelope. As currently implemented in-game, the AIM-54’s ideal range is in the ballpark of 35-45km, with anything closer being much too visible to be a threat to anyone with eyeballs, and anything further starting to range into “too slow to ba dangerous” considering all its other characteristics. Keep in mind the above test is a M1.2 launch vs M1.2 target at 9000m alt, and that 99% of shots in WT will not occur in such good conditions.