I hope you enjoy the video here are some of my other videoes :D • War Thunder maps are t... • Artillery double kill ... • AIM-7F 30Km Kill F4J #... #warthunder
Ok 1 this is a fox 1 it uses radar off of your plane to guide itself to your target most fox 1's are equipped with something called (memory mode) what this means is the missile will still track from the last known position and go to where it thinks the target will be. Now a fox 3 witch is a AMRAAM or known as a AIM-120 and other names they use the radar on the aircraft to find the target and lock the target (this is where it gets complicated) the fox 3 will use the aircrafts radar to guide itself in and if the aircraft loses lock it instantly uses a radar on the missile to continue guiding itself also known as (going Pitbull) now what makes this type of missile special it can also be guided in using a radar mode called TWS from the radar on the aircraft this type of rader can track multiple targets and one primary target without setting off the targets RWR meaning the target will never know that a fox 3 was fired on him till the fox 3 enter something we call (kill range) witch is 7km away at that time the missile stops using the aircrafts radar and instantly gose (pitbull) and it is very hard to dodge/ impossible
So I was tracking the enemy with radar then I turn it off and it seems the missile is still tracking the enemy and it works like fire and forget. Hopes this clear up :)
@@AvalonOfficial This has been happening to me as well. I think it's because the 7F has a PD seekerhead, could be wrong. It's so much better now than at launch though.
The Aim-7F has a PD seeker, so it can only see a target which is moving at a relativ higher or lower speed to the missile. The FGR.2 was probably still in the main lobe of the radar with enough radar return to guide the Aim-7F into the target. (Edit: The Missile won't self destruct immediately if there is no radar return, so if the missile is close and the target won't maneuver, It's a kill)
Ok 1 this is a fox 1 it uses radar off of your plane to guide itself to your target most fox 1's are equipped with something called (memory mode) what this means is the missile will still track from the last known position and go to where it thinks the target will be. Now a fox 3 witch is a AMRAAM or known as a AIM-120 and other names they use the radar on the aircraft to find the target and lock the target (this is where it gets complicated) the fox 3 will use the aircrafts radar to guide itself in and if the aircraft loses lock it instantly uses a radar on the missile to continue guiding itself also known as (going Pitbull) now what makes this type of missile special it can also be guided in using a radar mode called TWS from the radar on the aircraft this type of rader can track multiple targets and one primary target without setting off the targets RWR meaning the target will never know that a fox 3 was fired on him till the fox 3 enter something we call (kill range) witch is 7km away at that time the missile stops using the aircrafts radar and instantly gose (pitbull) and it is very hard to dodge/ impossible
AIM-7s doesn't have IOG
@@Zlyusha oh but they do the later AIM-7's
. Should also mention i worked around them
Calm down don’t share some classified documents here 😭
@@AvalonOfficialthere not classified docs
when gaijin adds the f-4f ice with amraams
I really hope gaijin adds the f-4f ice
Only had to wait 2 years. Its about to be added. Lol@@francisco2559
This aged well.
@Warthunderspecialist1 I agree 🤪
Some Fox 1 can still chasing the enemy at 1km before the enemy
Honestly I need this explained to me.
So I was tracking the enemy with radar then I turn it off and it seems the missile is still tracking the enemy and it works like fire and forget. Hopes this clear up :)
Your radar was still illuminating him( kinda funny how it’s modeled)
@@AvalonOfficial This has been happening to me as well. I think it's because the 7F has a PD seekerhead, could be wrong. It's so much better now than at launch though.
The Aim-7F has a PD seeker, so it can only see a target which is moving at a relativ higher or lower speed to the missile. The FGR.2 was probably still in the main lobe of the radar with enough radar return to guide the Aim-7F into the target.
(Edit: The Missile won't self destruct immediately if there is no radar return, so if the missile is close and the target won't maneuver, It's a kill)