Hi Don
Hard to say if anyone else is concerned because Andy has specifically instructed other people not to respond to my posts.
Ok lets call it "indirect HMG fire" as distinct from "Z" fire which doesnt go through trees.
The allocation of the extra range to 12.7, 13.2 and 15mm calibres depends on the combination two factors.
1. "indirect HMG fire" is only available to tripod mounted weapons.
2. The 12.7, 13.2 and 15mm calibres have a higher maximum range than the 7.62 and 7.92 calibres.
So because the extra 500m range is modelling indirect HMG fire then why do non-tripod mounted weapons (ie capable of direct fire only) in these calibres also get the bonus 500m?
In particular, weapon 101 (15mm Besa TMG) in the Great Britian OOB is a turret mounted main gun. I would just note here that prior to v6 this calibre actually did have a range of 30.
For the USA the weapons that are not HMGs but have the bounus 500m range are 140 "50 cal M2 AAMG", 143 "50 cal M2 AAMG", 153 "50 cal M2 TMG" and 215 "50cal Quad AAMG".
And for the Soviet Union weapons 141, "12.7 DShK AAMG", 152 "12.7mm DShK TMG" and 153 "12.7mm DShK CMG" same not HMGs.
No doubt there are others.
So these weapons dont conform to condition 1.
Even though AA does have a tripod, it is a simple afair not designed to lock the gun into small fixed arcs required for area fire.
For point 2. yes and no.
yes but not under 2000m.
From message number 20827 in the old DOS forum.
"Don't be absurd - dopplar radar measurements have shown that
rounds of that caliber(7.62) go unstable at about 2000 m"
and the proof
http://www.fulton-armory.com/fly/fig28.htm
One can see from the graph that this particular bullet loses its stability 14 seconds into its flight Carl says this is about 2000m you can probably derive the exact distance from the area under the graph if you are a genius.
My point is this, both 7.62/303/7.92 and 12.7/13.2/15.0 calibres are capable of putting out unaimed rounds to 2000m
So at ranges under 2000m both the big and small calibres should have the same indirect fire range, 2000m.
For example
A 50 cal can put a bullet out to 7000m or so.
see
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vickers_machine_gun
so the vickers can put a round out to 4100m
From
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rheinmetall_MG3
MG3(close enough for MG34 and 42 max range.) can put a round out to 3750m
I think the extra 500 m shouldnt be allocated unless the guns are firing further than say 3500m. Also because of the better ROF and lower recoil the smaller calibres put more bullets into the beaten zone. ie they are 'better' at indirect fire.
Ive certainly used HMGs out to 40 hexes to great effect.
I did some tests.
With visability set to 50 in June 44 I direct fired the american MG section 50 cals (1 per section 6 shots per gun) at german inf coy squads moving along a metal road at full speed.
range result (men killed 6 shots per gun)
1850 0
1800 1
1800 0
1800 1
1850 0
2000 0
2000 2
1550 0
1600 4
1600 1
1650 0
1550 2
1550 2
1650 0
1650 4
1600 1
Notwar winning but certainly annoying
Then I though what if it wasnt marching german infantry but panzer grenadiers trundelling along in their trucks?
I started with a truck in pretty much every adjacent hex. the trucks are loaded and moving at full speed.
range result(6 shots)
2000 8cm mortar destroyed,5 casualties 2 mg sections retreating, 2 pinned squads.
2000 1 Opel destroyed, 2 casualties 4 pinned squads.
2000 5 casualies 6 dismounted squads.
So i then removed every second column so there was a space between each column and moved forward a bit.
1800 3 casualties, 4 dismounted squads.
1850 opel immobilised, 6 casualties, 5 squads dismounted.
1900 4 casualties 4 dismounted squads.
1950 4 casualties 4 dismounted squads.
So I removed every second column again so no effects on any column other than the one Im firing at,
1800 2 casualties, 4 dismounted squads.
1850 3 casualties 1 mg destroyed, 3 squads dismounted.
1900 Opel destroyd, MG destroyed 1 casualty. 3 squads destroyed.
1950 1 casualtie 3 squads dismounted.
Note the particular susceptability of soft tagets carrying crewed weapons. The carried weapons often lose all their entire crew when forced to dismount in this way.
Try it, you can shoot up soft vehicles very easily at this range.
So in answer to your question
"Is that maximum 40 hex direct fire range used much in the game"
I would say that the extra range can be used to great benefit. And the situation of being able to cover a road in this way is possible in any open or medium cover type terrain.
Also just generally the 12.7 calibre is actually a bit heavy for a HMG calibre ROF is slow and barrels arnt quick change so they cant keep up th sort of sustained fire that the 7.62/7.92 calibres can. Because of this the smaller calibres are actually better suited to indirect area fire. They larger calibre HMGs were often actually allocated as AA and found there way to ground targets because people liked their greater punch.
Just in passing unit 112 Matilda I* has been given weapon 101 in error it actually should have the .5 inch vickers MG (12.7mm) I mentioned this already in the DOS forum.
Best Regards Chuck.