On the beta server launching missiles in a fast ship while boosting sees you just running alongside the missiles.
I’d have expected their speed to be added to your ship’s speed at launch...
Seekers, flak, flechettes, and I believe dumbfires, do not retain any momentum from the ship that fires them, and some ships can actually outpace what they launch.
Torpedoes are a partial exception, they start at 250m/s or the velocity of the ship that launches them, whichever is higher, after which they rapidly slow down to 250m/s.
Weird. One of the staples of hard sci-fi is that ships with higher velocities have the advantage when firing missiles. The Chanur series for example has one ship in supercruise decimating an entire enemy squadron since it caught them at low C speeds while firing it's own missiles at high C - with devastating impact.
Not that we have that in ED, still the same principle should apply in normal space.
You have a point... the main reason for giving ships a maximum speed, as opposed to a maximum acceleration, is to prevent most fights from devolving into jousting matches where you flash past your opponent in a couple of frames and combat becomes a bunch of quicktime events.
How do you figure?
Did you think combat in Elite isn't already like this?
I agree with OP and I'll add my vote to the bug report / feature request (s)he enters on this!
Oh oh oh, wouldn't it be cool if someone made a video of shooting them their own ship with the dumb fire missle(s) it just launched!![]()
IRL, it's been known for fighter jets to shoot themselves down with their own cannon:
https://www.popularmechanics.com/military/aviation/a27967/the-fighter-plane-that-shot-itself-down/
Leading to the projectiles traveling more slowly than the ship that fired them - which, IIRC, is the topic under discussion.in real life, bullets are slowed down by air-friction and gravity (the thing that happened in that incident)
in real life, bullets are slowed down by air-friction and gravity (the thing that happened in that incident)
Course, we should bear in mind that there isn't any aerodynamic drag in space.
The only reason a multi-stage rocket works is 'cos the upper-stages can take advantage of the thrust provided by the lower-stages to continue to accelerate even though they're using a much smaller engine.
I'd rather we didn't have cumulative acceleration in ED though.
I like having ships that can outrun missiles.
Also, it's kind of fun launching a missile in my Viper and then trying to fly in formation with it.
And, yes. I've been hit my my own missiles several times.
Hasn't everybody? [where is it]
Weird. One of the staples of hard sci-fi is that ships with higher velocities have the advantage when firing missiles. The Chanur series for example has one ship in supercruise decimating an entire enemy squadron since it caught them at low C speeds while firing it's own missiles at high C - with devastating impact.
Not that we have that in ED, still the same principle should apply in normal space.
But it'd be fun launching mines off an iCourier that travel faster than a Mamba and even huge cannons.![]()
Mines will accelerate to some pretty comical speeds if you drop them over high-g worlds.
Cannon and other projectiles, where the projectile isn't separately targetable do retain momentum of the ship firing them, oddly enough. A standard MC shot leaves a ship at 1600m/s relative to that ship. Even more strangely, this has no effect on damage, but seems to exist only as an aiming aid.
The folks calling this a "simulation " need a reality check. This game is as gamey as it gets.