Airgoons
WarCrimeGoons.jpg BMS.png
DCS.png

DCS Reference: Ships, Western

From Airgoons
< DCS Reference‎ | Ships
Revision as of 05:29, 29 December 2020 by Tippis (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Many carrier aircraft have somewhat contradictory definitions, or definitions of unclear value, as far as their carrying capacity. They may list only having 4 parking spots and a max number of aircraft or helicopters, in one sense, but then have coordinates set for over a dozen different parking spots on the deck. The blocks below distinguish between these two by calling them “nominal” and “defined” limits, where the nominal parking limit at most seems to correlate to how many different aircraft can be designated as “start on runway” in the mission editor.

The defensive arcs show the areas around the ship where specific defensive systems have full range of movement. This does not mean that areas that are not covered are safe — rather that the ship systems will be limited in their effectiveness because ship decks, conning towers, or bridges are in the way. However, given enough elevation, they can usually shoot over such obstructions, and only low-altitude skimming creates the coverage gaps demonstrated. In addition, depending on the guidance system of the weapon, they may be lofted above obstacles if the target is far enough away, which means that the “safe zone” only exists at low altitude and at close range.

Up to four range layers are shown in the arc sketches: close-range protection (from CIWS and simular systems); short-range protection, usually from IR-guided missiles; medium-range protection, usually from less advanced radar missiles; and long-range protection.

Ships

Arleigh Burke-class Destroyer

DDG-112 Michael Murphy[1]
Mission Editor Unit Function Stores Range / Symbol
USS Arleigh Burke IIa (Supercarrier) Guided-missile (AEGIS) destroyer 16+48× RIM-66 Standard Missile 2
2× 1550× 20mm Phalanx
2× 230× 25mm Bushmaster
1× 180× 127mm Mk45
2× 16× BGM-109 Tomahawk
Detection: 0–80.1nm / 0–150km
Detection alt.: 0–343,500ft / 0–104,700m[2]
RWR-AE.pngPO1-Long.png
Engagement: 0–54.0nm / 0–100km
Engagement alt.: 16.5–98,400ft / 5–30,000m
Hit points 2,100 Max speed 15.6m/s (30.2kts, 56.0km/h) Defensive arcs
Sensor limits[3] Surface radar: 360° horizontal × -5°–+10° vertical; 12s scan time.
SS lock-on: 18.9nm / 35km. Notch: <15m/s (29kts, 54km/h) vrad.
AA radar: 360° horizontal × -15°–+60° vertical.
AA lock-on: 119.3nm / 221km. Notch: <15m/s (29kts, 54km/h) vrad.
AEGIS trackers can guide 2 missiles per target at 9 targets at a time; lock-on time 2s.
Target size limit: 0.1m².[4]
Defensive systems main firing arcs.
Carrying capacity 1 defined helicopter parking spots.
2 helicopter nominal capacity.
Notes
Acts as a warehouse to deliver stores to other units and to landed aircraft. Per the internal definitions, it cannot re-arm its own weapon stores once depleted.

Is internally defined to allow attacks against targets up to 243nm / 450km away, presumably to allow for Tomahawk targeting.

Requires the Supercarrier module to control and add to missions.

Available to
Combined Joint Task Force Blue, but only with historical units turned off Combined Joint Task Force Red, but only with historical units turned off United Nations Peacekeepers, but only with historical units turned off USA, from 1991 USAF Aggressors, but only with historical units turned off


Nimitz-class Carrier

Nimitz subclass

CVN-70 Carl Vinson
Mission Editor Unit Function Stores Range / Symbol
CVN-70 Carl Vinson Carrier 3× 8× RIM-7 Sea Sparrow
4× 1550× 20mm Phalanx
Detection: 0–16.2nm / 0–30km
Detection alt.: 0–87,200ft / 0–26,600m[2]
RWR-SS.pngPO1-Short.png
Engagement: 0–8.1nm / 0–15km
Engagement alt.: 0–45,300ft / 0–13,800m
Hit points 7,300 Max speed 15.4m/s (29.9kts, 55.5km/h) Defensive arcs
Sensor limits Surface radar: 360° horizontal × -5°–+10° vertical; 12s scan time.
SS lock-on: 21.1nm / 39km. Notch: <15m/s (29kts, 54km/h) vrad.
AA Radar: 360° horizontal × -15°–+60° vertical; 1s scan.
AA lock-on: 13.8nm / 25.5km. Notch: <10m/s (19kts, 36km/h) vrad.
No target size limit is defined that would affect its ability to engage incoming air weapons.
Defensive systems main firing arcs.
Carrying capacity 13 defined aircraft parking spots.
5 defined helicopter parking spots.
2+2 catapults (1+1 can be used safely in parallel).
4 nominal spawn points.
72 aircraft + 6 helicopter nominal capacity.
Notes
Acts as a warehouse to deliver stores to other units and to landed aircraft. Per the internal definitions, it cannot re-arm its own weapon stores once depleted.

Not compatible with the AV-8B NA Harrier.

Available to
Combined Joint Task Force Blue, but only with historical units turned off Combined Joint Task Force Red, but only with historical units turned off United Nations Peacekeepers, but only with historical units turned off USA, from 1982 USAF Aggressors, but only with historical units turned off

Theodore Roosevelt sub-class (Basic)

CVN-74 John C. Stennis
Mission Editor Unit Function Stores Range / Symbol
CVN-74 John C. Stennis Carrier 2× 8× RIM-7 Sea Sparrow
3× 1550× 20mm Phalanx
Detection: 0–16.2nm / 0–30km
Detection alt.: 0–87,200ft / 0–26,600m
RWR-SS.pngPO1-Short.png
Engagement: 0.2–8.1nm / 0.4–15km
Engagement alt.: 15–49,200ft / 5–15,000m
Hit points 7,300 Max speed 15.4m/s (29.9kts, 55.4km/h) Defensive arcs
Sensor limits Surface radar: 360° horizontal × -5°–+10° vertical; 12s scan time.
SS lock-on: 21.1nm / 39km. Notch: <15m/s (29kts, 54km/h) vrad.
AA radar: 360° horizontal × -15°–+60° vertical; 1s scan.
AA radar lock-on: 13.8nm / 25.5km. Notch: <10m/s (19kts, 36km/h) vrad.
Mk95 trackers can engage 4 targets at a time with 1 missile each; lock-on time 2.5s.
Size limit: 0.1m².[4]
Defensive systems main firing arcs.
Carrying capacity 19 defined aircraft parking spots.
8 defined helicopter parking spots.
2+2 catapults (2+2 can be used safely in parallel).
4 nominal spawn points.
72 aircraft + 6 helicopter nominal capacity.
Notes
Acts as a warehouse to deliver stores to other units and to landed aircraft. Per the internal definitions, it cannot re-arm its own weapon stores once depleted.

The engagement limits only apply to the Mk95 trackers used to guide RIM-7 Sea Sparrows.

Not compatible with the AV-8B NA Harrier.

Available to
Combined Joint Task Force Blue, but only with historical units turned off Combined Joint Task Force Red, but only with historical units turned off United Nations Peacekeepers, but only with historical units turned off USA, from 1995 USAF Aggressors, but only with historical units turned off

Theodore Roosevelt sub-class (Supercarrier)

CVN-71 Theodore Roosevelt, CVN-73 George Washington, CVN-75 Harry S. Truman
Mission Editor Unit Function Stores Range / Symbol
CVN-71 Theodore Roosevelt
CVN-73 George Washington
CVN-75 Harry S. Truman (Supercarrier)
Carrier 2× 8× RIM-7 Sea Sparrow
2× 21× RIM-116 RAM
2× 1550× 20mm Phalanx
Detection: 0–16.2nm / 0–30km
Detection alt.: 0–87,200ft / 0–26,600m
RWR-SS.pngPO1-Short.png
Engagement: 0.2–16.2nm / 0.4–30km
Engagement alt.: 15–49,200ft / 5–15,000m
Hit points 7,300 Max speed 15.4m/s (29.9kts, 55.4km/h) Defensive arcs[5]
Sensor limits Surface radar: 360° horizontal × -5°–+10° vertical; 12s scan time.
SS lock-on: 21.1nm / 39km. Notch: <15m/s (29kts, 54km/h) vrad.
AA radar: 360° horizontal × -15°–+60° vertical; 1s scan.
AA radar lock-on: 13.8nm / 25.5km. Notch: <10m/s (19kts, 36km/h) vrad.
Mk95 trackers can engage 3 targets at a time with 1 missile each; lock-on time 2.5s.
Size limit: 0.1m².[4]
Defensive systems main firing arcs.
Carrying capacity 19 defined aircraft parking spots.
8 defined helicopter parking spots.
2+2 catapults (1+1 can be used safely in parallel).
4 nominal spawn points.
72 aircraft + 6 helicopter nominal capacity.
Notes
Acts as a warehouse to deliver stores to other units and to landed aircraft. Per the internal definitions, it cannot re-arm its own weapon stores once depleted.

The engagement limits only apply to the Mk95 trackers used to guide RIM-7 Sea Sparrows.

Not compatible with the AV-8B NA Harrier.

Requires the Supercarrier module to control and add to missions. The different hulls only differ in terms of aesthetics and placement of on-board decorations.

Available to
Combined Joint Task Force Blue, but only with historical units turned off Combined Joint Task Force Red, but only with historical units turned off United Nations Peacekeepers, but only with historical units turned off USA, from 1995 USAF Aggressors, but only with historical units turned off
CVN-72 Abraham Lincoln
Mission Editor Unit Function Stores Range / Symbol
CVN-72 Abraham Lincoln  (Supercarrier) Carrier 2× 8× RIM-7 Sea Sparrow
2× 21× RIM-116 RAM
3× 1550× 20mm Phalanx
Detection: 0–16.2nm / 0–30km
Detection alt.: 0–87,200ft / 0–26,600m
RWR-SS.pngPO1-Short.png
Engagement: 0.2–16.2nm / 0.4–30km
Engagement alt.: 15–49,200ft / 5–15,000m
Hit points 7,300 Max speed 15.4m/s (29.9kts, 55.4km/h) Defensive arcs[5]
Sensor limits Surface radar: 360° horizontal × -5°–+10° vertical; 12s scan time.
SS lock-on: 21.1nm / 39km. Notch: <15m/s (29kts, 54km/h) vrad.
AA radar: 360° horizontal × -15°–+60° vertical; 1s scan.
AA radar lock-on: 13.8nm / 25.5km. Notch: <10m/s (19kts, 36km/h) vrad.
Mk95 trackers can engage 3 targets at a time with 1 missile each; lock-on time 2.5s.
Size limit: 0.1m².[4]
Defensive systems main firing arcs.
Carrying capacity 19 defined aircraft parking spots.
8 defined helicopter parking spots.
2+2 catapults (1+1 can be used safely in parallel).
4 nominal spawn points.
72 aircraft + 6 helicopter nominal capacity.
Notes
Acts as a warehouse to deliver stores to other units and to landed aircraft. Per the internal definitions, it cannot re-arm its own weapon stores once depleted.

The engagement limits only apply to the Mk95 trackers used to guide RIM-7 Sea Sparrows.

Not compatible with the AV-8B NA Harrier.

Requires the Supercarrier module to control and add to missions. Differs from the other Theodore Roosevelt supercarriers in having a third aft CIWS and a wider front Sea Sparrow engagement arc.

Available to
Combined Joint Task Force Blue, but only with historical units turned off Combined Joint Task Force Red, but only with historical units turned off United Nations Peacekeepers, but only with historical units turned off USA, from 1995 USAF Aggressors, but only with historical units turned off

Oliver Hazard Perry-class Frigate

FFG-46 Rentz
Mission Editor Unit Function Stores Range / Symbol
Oliver Hazard Perry class Guided-missile frigate 1× 24× RIM-66 Standard Missile 2
1× 1550× 20mm Phalanx
4× 100× 12.7mm M2
2× 230× 25mm Bushmaster
1× 180× 76mm Mk75
1× 16× RGM-84 Harpoon
Detection: 0–80.1nm / 0–150km
Detection alt.: 0–343,500ft / 0–104,700m[2]
RWR-49.pngPO1-Long.png
Engagement: 0–54.0nm / 0–100km
Engagement alt.: 0–229,000ft / 0–69,800m
Hit points 2,300 Max speed 14.9m/s (29.0kts, 53.6km/h) Defensive arcs
Sensor limits[3] Surface radar: 360° horizontal × -5°–+10° vertical; 12s scan time.
SS lock-on: 18.2nm / 33.6km. Notch: <15m/s (29kts, 54km/h) vrad.
AA radar: 360° horizontal × -15°–+60° vertical.
AA lock-on: 119.3nm / 221km. Notch: <15m/s (29kts, 54km/h) vrad.
Mk92 tracker can engage 1 targets at a time; lock-on time 10s.
No target size limit is defined that would affect its ability to engage incoming air weapons.
Defensive systems main firing arcs.
Carrying capacity 1 defined helicopter parking spots.
2 helicopter nominal capacity.
Notes
Acts as a warehouse to deliver stores to other units and to landed aircraft. Per the internal definitions, it cannot re-arm its own weapon stores once depleted.

The Mk13 launch rail has a nominal readying time of 12s between missiles, but this is almost always swallowed up by the locking time and guidance of previous missiles, unless the enemy target is at very close range (in which case missiles are often not used at all).

Is internally defined to allow attacks against targets up to 65.8nm / 120km away, presumably to allow for Harpoon targeting.

Available to
Australia, from 1980 Bahrain, from 1997 Combined Joint Task Force Blue, but only with historical units turned off Combined Joint Task Force Red, but only with historical units turned off Egypt, from 1996 Pakistan, from 2011 Poland, from 2002 Spain, from 1986 Turkey, from 1997 United Nations Peacekeepers, but only with historical units turned off USA, from 1977 to 2015 USAF Aggressors, but only with historical units turned off

Tarawa-class Amphibious Assault Ship

LHA-1 Tarawa
Mission Editor Unit Function Stores Range / Symbol
LHA-1 Tarawa Amphibious Assault Ship 2× 21× RIM-116 RAM
2× 1550× 20mm Phalanx
Detection: 0–162.0nm / 0–300km
Detection alt.: 0–85,800ft / 0–26,100m[2]
RWR-40.pngPO1-Short.png
Engagement: 0.2–16.2nm / 0.4–30km
Engagement alt.: 16.4–49,200ft / 5–15,000m
Hit points 7,300 Max speed 15.4m/s (29.9kts, 55.4km/h) Defensive arcs
Sensor limits Surface radar: 360° horizontal × -5°–+10° vertical; 12s scan time.
SS lock-on: 21.1nm / 39km. Notch: <15m/s (29kts, 54km/h) vrad.
AA Radar: 360° horizontal × -15°–+60° vertical; 1s scan.
AA lock-on: 13.8nm / 25.5km. Notch: <10m/s (19kts, 36km/h) vrad.
Mk95 trackers can engage 2 targets at a time with one missile each; lock-on time 2.5s.
Target size limit: 0.1m².[4]
Defensive systems main firing arcs.
Carrying capacity 8 defined aircraft parking spots.
9 defined helicopter parking spots.
4 nominal spawn points.
40 aircraft + 36 helicopter nominal capacity.
Notes
Acts as a warehouse to deliver stores to other units and to landed aircraft. Per the internal definitions, it cannot re-arm its own weapon stores once depleted.

Its detection and engagement range are defined to be an order of magnitude higher than any of its sensors and weapon systems could possibly reach or make use of, causing the threat circles in the mission editor to be massively and ridiculously over-exaggerated. The engagement ranges listed are what the on-board Mk95 tracking radar is actually capable of, which in turn exceeds what the actual weapon systems are capable of by a factor of ×2.

Available to
Combined Joint Task Force Blue, but only with historical units turned off Combined Joint Task Force Red, but only with historical units turned off United Nations Peacekeepers, but only with historical units turned off USA, from 1976 USAF Aggressors, but only with historical units turned off

Ticonderoga-class Cruiser

CG-65 Chosin
Mission Editor Unit Function Stores Range / Symbol
Ticonderoga class Guided-missile (AEGIS) cruiser 2× 45× RIM-66 Standard Missile 2
2× 1550× 20mm Phalanx
3× 100× 12.7mm M2
2× 230× 25mm Bushmaster
2× 180× 127mm Mk45
2× 4× RGM-84 Harpoon
2× 16× BGM-109 Tomahawk
Detection: 0–80.1nm / 0–150km
Detection alt.: 0–343,500ft / 0–104,700m[2]
RWR-AE.pngPO1-Long.png
Engagement: 0–54.0nm / 0–100km
Engagement alt.: 16.5–98,400ft / 5–30,000m
Hit points 2,700 Max speed 15.4m/s (29.9kts, 55.4km/h) Defensive arcs
Sensor limits[3] Surface radar: 360° horizontal × -5°–+10° vertical; 12s scan time.
SS lock-on: 18.9nm / 35km. Notch: <15m/s (29kts, 54km/h) vrad.
AA radar: 360° horizontal × -15°–+60° vertical.
AA lock-on: 119.3nm / 221km. Notch: <15m/s (29kts, 54km/h) vrad.
AEGIS trackers can guide 2 missiles per target at 9 targets at a time; lock-on time 2s.
Target size limit: 0.1m².[4]
Defensive systems main firing arcs.
Carrying capacity 1 defined helicopter parking spots.
2 helicopter nominal capacity.
Notes
Acts as a warehouse to deliver stores to other units and to landed aircraft. Per the internal definitions, it cannot re-arm its own weapon stores once depleted.

Is internally defined to allow attacks against targets up to 243nm / 450km away, presumably to allow for Harpoon and Tomahawk targeting.

Available to
Combined Joint Task Force Blue, but only with historical units turned off Combined Joint Task Force Red, but only with historical units turned off United Nations Peacekeepers, but only with historical units turned off USA, from 1989 USAF Aggressors, but only with historical units turned off

Systems

Phalanx CIWS

RIM-7 Sea Sparrow

RIM-66 Standard Missile 2

RIM-116 Rolling Airframe Missile

Notes

  1. Hull number 112 is supposed to be a single-CIWS variant, but the model in DCS features both a fore and an aft CIWS system.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 This unit uses an antiquated and simplified sensor definition based on angles to define its search altitude, as opposed to more moden explicit limits.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 According to the measuring distance and lock-on distance coefficient in the data files, this system can actually detect and lock targets beyond its stated in-effect detection range. This is because it uses stats of a land-based system that could conceivably have distributed and data-linked detectors that would necessitate such capabilities in its simulation.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 Compare, effective target sizes:
    • Small: Vikhr: 0.012m² · AGM-114: 0.015m² · AGM-122: 0.03m² · BGM-71 0.033m²
    • Medium: AGM-88 / C-701 / LD-10: 0.05m² · Kh-23 / Kh-25 / Kh-66: 0.06m² · AGM-154 0.05–0.062m³ · AGM-65 / Rb-75: 0.063m² · LS-6: 0.07m² · C-802 / AGM-45: 0.09m²
    • Large: GB-6 / Kh-35: 0.1m² · Kh-58 / Rb-04 / Rb-05 / Rb-15 / Sea Eagle: 0.12m² · AGM-84: 0.08–0.17m² · AGM-86 / Kh-65: 0.17m² · Kh-29: 0.18m² · Kh-59: 0.2m² · Kh-31: 0.3m² · BK-90: 0.4m²
    • OMFG: ADM-141: 0.9–1.2m² · Kh-22: 1.82m² ·
  5. 5.0 5.1 Currently, the tracking for the super carriers is incorrectly set, leaving a gap in roughly a 60%deg; cone in the front of the ship where it cannot use its forward Sea Sparrow battery.