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Boomer Angle 90 non-formula
For the longest
time I wondered what this formula was, then I realized everyone
who talked about "angle 90 formula" was just full of crap
:D ... there is no formula for angle 90 because you'd need to memorize
a fixed power first, then you'd need to know how every type of wind
affects your shot at 90. Without a specific power level it's very
hard to make an accurate wind chart for your fixed angle 90, and
even if you have a specific power level it's hard - because the
closer you come to angle 90 the less predictable your shot seems
to be. Most windcharts are estimates of how a shot will behave when
shot between ... let's say 60-80 degrees. These windcharts aren't
meant for shooting straight up (which is why almost all fixed power
shots seem to land short of where you expect when you calculate
that you need angle 90 or close to it).
OK, I said a
whole lot without giving any info, so here's how to use 90:
1. Know a LOT
of fixed power shots and basic wind adjustment for them. Memorize
how to adjust full power shots, 2 bar shots, banpao, 2.8, 70 bjsl(?),
2.25 bar shots, etc.
2. With this knowledge, choose a power level based on one of these
shots and estimate how far your shot will travel using angle 90
and the chosen power level. Estimating this is easy:
First: Multiply the wind strength by the wind factor.
Second: The result is how many screen distance units your shot should
travel. I know that needs some explanation. Let's say you know that
with a fixed power 2.25 bar shot, you would raise 10 angles in 9
wind. Another way of saying that is that 9 wind carries your shot
10 "parts". Since 2.25 is based on a 30 part screen, you
know 9 wind is carrying 10/30 parts. Therefore 9 wind carries your
shot 1/3 screen distance. So 90, 2.25 should travel about 1/3 screen.
3. Make small adjustments based on wind direction, enemy distance,
and the fact that angle 90 shots seem to land shorter than you expect.
This is mostly feel/experience/guesswork.
Let's say wind
is 10 down+towards the enemy. From experience you know that at full
power your shot is carried something like 6 parts in this kind of
wind (I dunno for sure). Therefore since 1 screen is 9 parts, you
know that 90 full power should travel 2/3 of a screen.
You get the
idea? You need lots of experience with adjusting angle for wind
using other formulas, then you can start to get a good accurate
picture of how much power to use from angle 90. Try to estimate
where 2 bars, 2.25, 2.8, or full power might go then adjust power
based on those guesses to make accurate hits.
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To make this
more useful I'm going to put in some guesses -
not confirmed info - for different wind situations.
26 wind directly
left/right:
1 SD: 2.05
1/2 sd: 1.42
13 wind directly
left/right:
1 SD: 3.1
1/2 sd: 2.15
26 wind diagonal
(45 degrees up+forward):
1 SD: 1.5
1/2 SD: 1.05
13 wind diagonal
(45 degrees up+forward):
1 SD: 2.9
1/2 SD: 1.4
26 wind diagonal
(45 degrees down+forward):
1 SD: 3.1
1/2 SD: 1.55
13 wind diagonal
(45 degrees down+forward):
1 SD: NA?
1/2 SD: 3.0?
Sorry if any
of this is off by a lot.
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