Gun Stabilizer

From War Thunder Wiki
Revision as of 07:24, 4 December 2019 by Jalal_Montero (talk | contribs) (Single-plane, Vertical)

Jump to: navigation, search
Introducing Wiki 3.0

Gun Stabilizer refers to the stabilization system present on an armament mounted onto a platform.

General Info

The gun stabilizer is a system that improves the tank gun’s aim at the target and preserves (stabilizes) its aim even when the hull vibrates during movement, which allows it to perform effective aimed fire during vehicle movement or when temporarily stopped.

Reaction time and accuracy between target detection and effective hit draw the line between life and death in tank warfare

Currently a stabilizer on specific tanks is simulated with a generic high vertical guidance (elevation) speed on the gun - which, of course, makes firing on the move or after a short stop easier, but still this does not provide a real simulation of stabilizer and fire control systems. After the introduction of the accurate stabilizer simulation, the vertical guidance speed on specifically equipped vehicles will be reduced to real life values.

This new feature will increase realism on machines historically equipped with a gun stabilisation system

The stabilization system for tank guns will be enabled by default for all armored vehicles on where such systems were historically installed. For tanks with the ability to aim the gun using a lever, by default the gun will aim as before, with the help of the aiming mechanism. The button to enable the stabilizer on such tanks will unlock the gun and enable stabilization mode.

-Devblog for Gun Stabilizer

Effect of Stabilizers

There are three types of stabilizers in the game: Single-plane, Shoulder-stop, and Two-plane.

Single-plane

Single-plane stabilizer is a simple stabilizer system that only stabilizes on a vertical axis. As such, the sights will still bounce quite a bit if moving fast on cross-country terrain, but it still provides a stable fighting platform when stopping to fire.

Stability while on the move is effective up to 15 kph on most tanks with the system. If the tank moves faster than 15 kph, the stabilizer disengages and the vehicle gun starts bouncing with the terrain until the speed returns to 15 kph.

Shoulder-stop

Shoulder-stop stabilizer is not truly a stabilizer in real life, but follows a principle due to the elevation mechanism on smaller caliber guns. This affects tanks with a small caliber gun such as the 2-pounder, which uses a shoulder rest for the gunner to manually elevate the gun. Due to the liberty the gunner had in the elevation on his shoulder rather than on gears, he could hold the gun steady as the tank was on the move and fire with relative ease. Aside from this description, its function in the tank is not as different as the single-plane, just not as fine.

Stability while on the move is effective only to around 8-9 kph before the stabilizer disengages.

Two-plane

The ultimate in gun stabilizing system, the two-plane stabilizer represents very stable steadiness with a stabilizing function of the horizontal and vertical axis. This gives a very smooth gun sighting when traveling on cross-country terrain.

Stability on the move is effective on all range speed, though one should caution in firing after moving around rough hills as while the sight remains on target, the gun may still be unaligned for a few seconds before returned to on target.

Vehicles with Gun Stabilizers in-game (Stabilization plane)

As of v.1.93.0.24

Single-plane, Vertical

Rank USA flag.png
USA
Germany flag.png
Germany
USSR flag.png
USSR
Britain flag.png
Britain
Japan flag.png
Japan
China flag.png
China
Italy flag.png
Italy
France flag.png
France
1 LVT(A)(1)

M3 Stuart

M3A1 Stuart

M3A1 (USMC)

M3 Medium (USSR) M3A3 Stuart (China)
2 M3 Lee

M4

M4A1

M4A2

M4A5

M5A1

M5A1 (5th arm.div.)

T14

T18E2

M4 748 (a) (Germany) Grant I (Great Britain)

Sherman II

M4A4 (China)

M4A4 (1st PTG)

M5A1 (China)

M24 (China)

M4A1 (France)
3 Calliope

Cobra King

M4A1 (76) W

M4A2 (76) W

M4A3 (76) W

M6A1

M24

M24 (TL)

T20

M4A2 (USSR) M4A3 (76) W (Japan)

M24 (Japan)

M4A1 (75) W (China) M4A3E2 (France)
4 M4A3E2 (76) W

T25

5 Type 59
6
7 BMP-3

Shoulder-stop, Vertical

USA flag.png
USA
Germany flag.png
Germany
USSR flag.png
USSR
Britain flag.png
Britain
Japan flag.png
Japan
China flag.png
China
Italy flag.png
Italy
France flag.png
France
M2A4
M2A4 (1st Arm.Div.)
M8 LAC
Pz.35(t)
Pz.38(t) A
Pz.38(t) F
Pz.II C
Pz.II C (DAK)
Pz.II F
▀Pz.Kpfw. Churchill
Sd.Kfz.221 (s.Pz.B.41)
A13 Mk I
A13 Mk II
A13 Mk II 1939
A13 Mk I (3rd R.T.R.)
AEC Mk II
Churchill I
Churchill III
Cromwell I
Crusader II
Crusader III
Daimler Mk II
Independent
Matilda III
Tetrarch I
Valentine I
Chi-Ha
Chi-Ha Kai
Chi-He
Ha-Go
Ha-Go Commander
I-Go Ko
Ka-Mi
Ke-Ni
␗Chi-Ha
␗Chi-Ha Kai
␗M8 LAC
L3/33 CC AMC.34 YR
AMC.35 (ACG.1)
AMR.35 ZT3
B1 bis
B1 ter
FCM.36
H.35
H.39
H.39 "Cambronne"
R.35 (SA38)
S.35

Two-plane

USA flag.png
USA
Germany flag.png
Germany
USSR flag.png
USSR
Britain flag.png
Britain
Japan flag.png
Japan
China flag.png
China
Italy flag.png
Italy
France flag.png
France
IPM1
M1 Abrams
M1A1
M1A2 Abrams
M3 Bradley
M60A1 (AOS)
M60A1 RISE (P)
M60A2
M247
M551
MBT-70
▃Merkava Mk.1
XM1 (Chrysler)
XM1 (GM)
XM803
Gepard
KPz-70
Leopard 2A4
Leopard 2A5
Leopard 2K
Leopard A1A1
Leopard A1A1 (L/44)
TAM
VT1-2
BMP-2
BMP-3
IT-1
Object 685
Object 906
PT-76B
T-10M
T-55A
T-55AM-1
T-62
T-62M-1
T-64A (1971)
T-64B
T-72A
T-80B
T-80U
2S6
ZSU-23-4
Caernarvon
Centurion Action X
Centurion Mk 3
Centurion Mk 10
Challenger 2
Challenger Mk.2
Challenger Mk.3
Chieftain Marksman
Chieftain Mk 3
Chieftain Mk 5
Chieftain Mk 10
Conqueror
FV4202
Falcon
▄Sho't Kal Dalet
Striker
▄Strv 81 (RB 52)
Vickers Mk.1
Vickers Mk.7
STB-2
Type 16
Type 74 (E)
Type 74 (G)
Type 87
Type 89
Type 90
CM11
␗M60A3 TTS
Type 69
ZTZ59D1
ZTZ96
Т-62 №545
AUBL/74 HVG
Ariete
Ariete (P)
Ariete PSO
Centauro I 105
Centauro I 105 R
OF-40 (MTCA)
OF-40 Mk.2A
OTOMATIC
R3 T20 FA-HS
SIDAM 25
SIDAM 25 (Mistral)
AMX-30 Super
AMX-40
Leclerc

History

To be Filled

Screenshots and fan art

Videos

Additional information (links)

References