Hi
Just to clarify my previous post a little.
For radar-guided SAM systems (some applicable to A-A systems as well, such as SARH...) I think these three systems should be represented.
1.- SARH guidance. This system works well in the simulator, I have only looked at a couple of units with this system but I don't see any problems with them, also the disadvantages of this system are very well represented in the simulator.
Advantages: I don't see any relevant ones from the simulator's point of view.
Disadvantages: Requires that the target can be tracked by the radar and that the radar be able to reflect enough energy on the target for the missile to "see" it and be guided to it.
When they launch a missile, the target generally, if it has some RWR type system, will receive an alert that a missile has been launched.
You can only guide missiles against a single target. One target for each FCR radar the unit has.
As I say, this guidance is perfectly represented in CMO.
2.- Command guidance
Here things get complicated, this type includes many different names that end up being the same.
This system can be found as "Pure" Command guidance, which is not represented in the simulator and covers a few very old units of the first SAM systems that came out, or in combination with other types of guidance for the final phase.
"Pure" Command guidance to simplify it, I would not represent it in the simulator, I would change it to SARH. For example, the first versions of the SA-2 use this type of guidance, characterized by being imprecise when the target is far from the radar.
In the simulator, for example, the SA-2 listed as SARH has a PH of 30%, which in itself represents the weaknesses of this type of guidance.
Due to the problems of this system, it is normally used in combination for the final phase with other guidance systems such as SARH or ARH.
This is represented in the simulator with very different names such as DL+SARH, DL+ TSARH, INS+SARH... which are basically the same. The problem is that none of these three work correctly since they do not have the mid-course updates nor is the radar turned on to provide those updates.
My opinion is to simplify them all as Command guidance + SARH.
Advantages: this system can guide more than one missile to different targets and only requires SARH type guidance in the last seconds of the flight.
While guiding the missiles you continue to have situational awareness of other contacts against the "pure" SARH guidance.
3.- TVM/SAGG/GAI
The "last" system is three, but I would classify it as one since the differences are subtle and for a simulator like CMO it is useless and imperceptible to make distinctions between them.
This system solves problems and improves the Command guidance and SARH systems.
Advantages:
Eliminates the need for final guidance (allowing to engage multiple targets at the same time in the final phases of the engagement) , the target has no warning through systems such as the RWR that a missile has been launched and others that are not relevant to the simulator.
You can list Patriot systems as TVM and systems like SA-10 as SAGG but at our simulation level the differences are imperceptible.
There are other systems with mid-course guidance via datalink and ARH terminal phase that have no problem and do not have the mess of as many versions as those mentioned above.
I hope to have clarified this a little and help to better represent these systems in the simulator and their correct operation.
Regards