Post Designate suits a shallower dive angle so it's perfect for getting bombs on a runway or a row of planes, tanks etc, or if you have cluster bombs and you don't want to get too low because of AAA. you can think of it like a hybrid between CCIP and CCRP. The normal CCIP method tends to be for a steeper dive, so it suits tighter groupings of targets. There's no difference in the setup so when you start your run you'll either see the Time Delay Cue or you won't. If the cue is very near the bottom of the bomb fall line then you can hold altitude for a second or two before resuming your dive to get a regular CCIP solution.
@@GotSpaceGame thank you, I never knew about the post designat method. So when the pipper goes over the target, press and gold bomb release. And the computer will do the rest
I don’t fly the f16 but I love your videos and want you to get the engagement.
these tutorials are priceless, thank you very much, Super concise and easy to follow!!
WOOL!
@@m_bagger 🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🐑
What would the advantages be of each deployment method?
Post Designate suits a shallower dive angle so it's perfect for getting bombs on a runway or a row of planes, tanks etc, or if you have cluster bombs and you don't want to get too low because of AAA. you can think of it like a hybrid between CCIP and CCRP. The normal CCIP method tends to be for a steeper dive, so it suits tighter groupings of targets. There's no difference in the setup so when you start your run you'll either see the Time Delay Cue or you won't. If the cue is very near the bottom of the bomb fall line then you can hold altitude for a second or two before resuming your dive to get a regular CCIP solution.
@@GotSpaceGame thank you, I never knew about the post designat method. So when the pipper goes over the target, press and gold bomb release. And the computer will do the rest