#Printable Artillery Charts, a Handy Alternative to Range Calculators!

1 messages · Page 1 of 1 (latest)

fiery marsh
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These charts are designed to provide accurate range and elevation information for artillery pieces in Hell Let Loose.
Perfect for players who want to skip alt-tabbing to external tools or enjoy the tactile experience of referencing a physical chart.

Keep the chart beside you for quick reference without disrupting gameplay, or simply keep it in PDF Format.

How to Use:
1) Use the chart corresponding to your Team (U.S/Germany, Soviet Union, Great Britain) and keep it handy during gameplay.
2) Determine the target’s distance (use your in-game map or communicate with teammates).
3) Refer to the chart to find the corresponding elevation settings for your artillery piece.
**4) **Adjust your aim and fire away!

Download Link:
(A4 Metric Paper:)
https://drive.google.com/file/d/12qdGZGOSm2Oc-IihK17nXkPzQFhs3VLU/view

(US Standard 8.5x11 Paper:)
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ZLkQBN8lbgcp7q2W8w0N5HTPvdMKVHAS/view

Thanks to @urban hornet for the original chart and calculations!

Enjoy!

potent cave
onyx violet
urban hornet
# onyx violet Way too complicated just use pings so much easier

The idea is you ping, and turn your gun towards the ping and/or artillery marker so its lined up. Then once you have it lined up on the gun you use the distance of the marker and check the chart and use the mil value.

You just have the chart printed out or on a second monitor so you can quickly see what MIL value to use and can adjust quickly without having to alt+tab to some online artillery calculator.

Some of us feel like its more useable to have a chart with all the MIL values when firing artillery.

urban hornet
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you still need to know the MIL value tho

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I always ping to orient where I want to shoot as well, then check what mil value I need to alter height of the gun

onyx violet
potent cave
onyx violet
urban hornet
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Thats why charts and calculators exist.

onyx violet
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@urban hornet dude you have to see on the side and just think with 2 braincells where the MIL and distance is meeting eachtoehr.

urban hornet
# onyx violet <@229759708368470016> dude you have to see on the side and just think with 2 bra...

MIL and Range are two different thing. MIL is the 'height' of the gun. Range is from where you ping to where you want to fire. From what you said here. "you just check the meters from the ping and the MIL closest" so i'm not sure what you mean by this. It seems like you are just using the distance from your ping example: (like 700 meters) and inputting it into the MIL on the gun which is wrong, which 700 meters distance should be 835.6 MIL on the gun.

However people enjoy using artillery charts to get accurate readings for what distace to > MIL they need to input to get the most 'accurate' value to hit on target.