I had not posted text from Legacy Hornet NATOPS as intended yesterday, which will perhaps make clear why the 'ghost vector' is off to the left, with the boresight off to the right, with the flightpath vector in the middle. Meant to post this info with the first graphic above. I'm getting too old for this.
F/A-18A/B/C/D NATOPS:"Velocity vector. The velocity vector provides the pilot with an outside world reference with regard to actual aircraft flight path. The velocity vector represents the point towards which the aircraft is flying (aircraft flight path). The position of the velocity vector is limited to an 8° radius circle centered at the HUD optical center. If the velocity vector reaches this limit during high angle of attack flight or large yaw and/or drift angles, then it flashes rapidly to indicate that it does not accurately indicate flight path. With GPS or EGI installed, if the INS velocity data becomes unreliable, the mission computer utilizes the GPS information. If INS velocity data becomes unreliable the mission computer utilizes air data computer information and the last available wind data to compute the velocity vector and this degraded velocity vector is indicated by a slow flashing of the symbol. In the NAV master mode, the velocity vector may be caged to the vertical center line of the HUD by the cage/uncage switch on the throttle. When it is caged, a
ghost velocity vector is displayed at the true velocity vector position if that position is more than 2° from the caged position. The flight path/pitch ladder and steering information are referenced to the caged position. The
ghost velocity vector flashes when limited. With MC OFP 09C, 11C, 13C, and 15C, the flight path/pitch ladder is referenced to the waterline symbol when the velocity vector is caged.
WARNINGSustained climbs and descents can result in uncued vertical velocity placement errors and subsequent HUD velocity placement errors. Error magnitudes increase at slower airspeeds and lower altitudes. Errors of up to three degrees have been observed in the landing configuration. Three minutes of level flight may be required to allow the INS to correct the vertical velocity function."