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Yora
2012-03-26, 12:47 AM
Sport-Tournaments are a completely different thing than warfare, and here it's both fighters with a polearm (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T8J_IkuUbak), but you can se them getting quite close to each other several times.

TechnoScrabble
2012-03-26, 12:58 AM
So, I'm reading some of the debates about strategy used decades or even centuries ago and I notice that people are wondering or arguing over why a strategy didn't work or did when it shouldn't or were or weren't ever used.

I have an answer that covers some of them:

Compared to modern adults, people back then knew JACK ****E.

Can't really blame them, though.

Ashtagon
2012-03-26, 01:09 AM
So, I'm reading some of the debates about strategy used decades or even centuries ago and I notice that people are wondering or arguing over why a strategy didn't work or did when it shouldn't or were or weren't ever used.

I have an answer that covers some of them:

Compared to modern adults, people back then knew JACK ****E.

Can't really blame them, though.

I've seen this referred to as the "Your Ancestors Were Dummies" theory.
The most notable example was when the then-Rhodesian government claimed the ruins of ancient Zimbabwe were natural rock formations.

Fhaolan
2012-03-26, 01:30 AM
You know, people always talk about getting up in the reach of Mr. Spearperson, but at least in my limited sparring experience that's not really particularly useful. Sure it sometimes works, but what happens more often than not is that the spear fighter just takes a step backwards, brings their weapon back in line and stabs you in the stomach.

If a single step back brings the point into line, the opponent isn't inside your reach yet. If their shorter weapon can reach you while only being a single step in, you're probably using a short spear/poleweapon that doesn't really have a 'inside the reach' problem.

I'm thinking of the 10-12' infantry spears, not the 5-7' hewing spears. When I started doing this kind of thing, I was messing around with 18-20' pikes. Those are a *real* pain to work with. A single person with a pike is pretty darn useless, they only really work as a weapon in formation.

Yora
2012-03-26, 01:42 AM
Time for Got a Real-World Weapon or Armor Question? Mk. X.

Mike_G
2012-03-26, 07:01 AM
You know, people always talk about getting up in the reach of Mr. Spearperson, but at least in my limited sparring experience that's not really particularly useful. Sure it sometimes works, but what happens more often than not is that the spear fighter just takes a step backwards, brings their weapon back in line and stabs you in the stomach. Spears are very quick weapons, and somebody with any sort of proficiency can thrust, retract and thrust again to a different quarter generally faster than you can displace their weapon with a sword, step forwards and attack again.

Not with a long spear. A short spear doesn't get the big reach advantage, and a longer one is easier to beat aside and get inside the reach of.

There's a reason pikemen carried shorter swords.

And if the swordsman has a shield, he can deflect the spear with it as he steps in and attacks with his sword. If you have two hands on the spear, you have no shield to stop that attack, if you have one hand on it you'll have a harder time recovering from it being beat out of line.

Roman legionaires and Spanish rotelleros practiced this. You needed a strong, agile soldier, preferably with decent armor and a shield and big, brass balls, but it could be done.



It only gets worse if the spearfighter has guys on either side and to the rear with spears as well. You lunge, he steps back, and you are now vulnerable to four or six different people, none of whom you can immediately threaten. You either back off or get stabbed, and your intended victim steps back into line, possibly while stabbing you.


If he's in a tight formation, he doesn't step back. If he chokes up on his weapon, the butt of it entangles the second rank. If he steps back, he gets tangled up with his buddies in the second rank. In a loose formation you have individual mobility to change distance. In a phalanx/schiltron/pike square, not so much.




From my limited knowledge of the historical record, I'm also struggling to think of any cases where a dense formation of spear equipped infantry was broken in head to head combat by anything other than another dense formation of spear equipped infantry. Herodotus indicates that the Persians at Thermopylae were incapable of doing anything to the Spartan formation until after their spears, which were longer than those used by Persian infantry, had broken. All of the Roman victories over phalanxes that spring to my mind occurred only after the phalanx had lost significant cohesion during an advance over uneven terrain. The Normans only won Hastings after the Anglo-Saxons broke their own shieldwall following a feigned retreat, but previous to that they had held for nine hours under attack by one of the most sophisticated and technologically advanced combined arms deployments of the era.


The Romans successfully fought phalanxes with sword and shield armed troops. The Roman units were looser and more maneuverable, and were able to create and exploit gaps in the phalanx. If you can't advance over anything but tabletop flat terrain, you need to rethink your tactics.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cynoscephalae

The tactics are examined here:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_infantry_tactics#Roman_infantry_versus_Helle nic_phalanx

You can break up spear formations with missiles, you can flank them.

Yes, tight units with long, pointy sticks were effective from antiquity through Waterloo, but they only work until the enemy creates and exploits a gap.

gkathellar
2012-03-26, 07:44 AM
So, I'm reading some of the debates about strategy used decades or even centuries ago and I notice that people are wondering or arguing over why a strategy didn't work or did when it shouldn't or were or weren't ever used.

I have an answer that covers some of them:

Compared to modern adults, people back then knew JACK ****E.

Can't really blame them, though.

This is one of those vicious and pernicious myths that the legacies of the 18th and 19th centuries make terribly hard to get rid of. Let's just do the basics, to start with: people in the oft-reviled medieval period of Europe alone had good hygiene, fantastic knowledge of geometry, mechanical energy, architecture and optics (among other things) available to them, and relatively sophisticated crafts. You can imagine what less notorious periods were like. Human beings have come a long way in the past two centuries, but it's unfair to discredit the ages beforehand as being run by simpletons.

If you actually look at the historical record you notice just how many major battles (over the course of thousands of years) have been won through sheer brilliance, information control, and beautiful lateral thinking. Also keep in mind that in the age before information technology and everyone having reliable maps, making catastrophic mistakes was a great deal easier than it is today. This doesn't mean the participants were stupid — it means they did their best with the information available to them.

Also, try to understand that if you do something all the time, for almost your entire life, starting between the ages of six and ten, you will be good at that thing. This is the approximate relationship between many professional soldiers or warriors and the craft of war in many historical societies. These guys knew their craft, and they knew it well.

pendell
2012-03-26, 07:54 AM
This is one of those vicious and pernicious myths that the legacies of the 18th and 19th centuries make terribly hard to get rid of. Let's just do the basics, to start with: people in the oft-reviled medieval period of Europe alone had good hygiene, fantastic knowledge of geometry, mechanical energy, architecture and optics (among other things) available to them, and relatively sophisticated crafts. You can imagine what less notorious periods were like. Human beings have come a long way in the past two centuries, but it's unfair to discredit the ages beforehand as being run by simpletons


Quite. The fundamental text on war was written by Sun Tzu thousands of years ago. There have also been all kinds of technics, tactical manuals, and other things from the Roman and Byzantine periods that are not nearly as well preserved but are known by specialists. The Romans built bridges and roads that are still in use, and the pyramids were built by ancient Egypt. I think it's fair to say that it's only been since about the 18th century or so that we really started to surpass the Romans technologically.

Respectfully,

Brian P.

Galloglaich
2012-03-26, 09:42 AM
This is one of those vicious and pernicious myths that the legacies of the 18th and 19th centuries make terribly hard to get rid of. Let's just do the basics, to start with: people in the oft-reviled medieval period of Europe alone had good hygiene, fantastic knowledge of geometry, mechanical energy, architecture and optics (among other things) available to them, and relatively sophisticated crafts. You can imagine what less notorious periods were like. Human beings have come a long way in the past two centuries, but it's unfair to discredit the ages beforehand as being run by simpletons.

If you actually look at the historical record you notice just how many major battles (over the course of thousands of years) have been won through sheer brilliance, information control, and beautiful lateral thinking. Also keep in mind that in the age before information technology and everyone having reliable maps, making catastrophic mistakes was a great deal easier than it is today. This doesn't mean the participants were stupid — it means they did their best with the information available to them.

Also, try to understand that if you do something all the time, for almost your entire life, starting between the ages of six and ten, you will be good at that thing. This is the approximate relationship between many professional soldiers or warriors and the craft of war in many historical societies. These guys knew their craft, and they knew it well.

QFT, very well said.

G.

Hawkfrost000
2012-03-26, 10:59 AM
So, I'm reading some of the debates about strategy used decades or even centuries ago and I notice that people are wondering or arguing over why a strategy didn't work or did when it shouldn't or were or weren't ever used.

I have an answer that covers some of them:

Compared to modern adults, people back then knew JACK ****E.

Can't really blame them, though.

Why do you say that?

most of what we know today even the most basic assumptions in our lives, like the world being round, are based on experiments and calculations done by people who lived hundreds of years ago.

In addition how many adults today could even command a unit of soldiers much less oversee an entire battle? How many could grasp the logistics involved? How many could make a suit of full plate armour? How many could fight in hand to hand, with swords and with lances by the time they were 12? How many of them could deduce the laws of motion from first principles, or conclude that the earth is round merely from looking at the evidence given by shadows cast at noon?

Not very many

DM

TechnoScrabble
2012-03-26, 05:27 PM
This is one of those vicious and pernicious myths that the legacies of the 18th and 19th centuries make terribly hard to get rid of. Let's just do the basics, to start with: people in the oft-reviled medieval period of Europe alone had good hygiene, fantastic knowledge of geometry, mechanical energy, architecture and optics (among other things) available to them, and relatively sophisticated crafts. You can imagine what less notorious periods were like. Human beings have come a long way in the past two centuries, but it's unfair to discredit the ages beforehand as being run by simpletons.

If you actually look at the historical record you notice just how many major battles (over the course of thousands of years) have been won through sheer brilliance, information control, and beautiful lateral thinking. Also keep in mind that in the age before information technology and everyone having reliable maps, making catastrophic mistakes was a great deal easier than it is today. This doesn't mean the participants were stupid — it means they did their best with the information available to them.

Also, try to understand that if you do something all the time, for almost your entire life, starting between the ages of six and ten, you will be good at that thing. This is the approximate relationship between many professional soldiers or warriors and the craft of war in many historical societies. These guys knew their craft, and they knew it well.

Oh yeah, they were geniuses. Just not as smart as today's geniuses. Also, not all geniuses are omnidisciplinary geniuses. Pretty sure I spelled that wrong.

And I wasn't saying they were dumb so much as 'they didn't think to do this or that like we do'.

Raum
2012-03-26, 06:10 PM
And I wasn't saying they were dumb so much as 'they didn't think to do this or that like we do'.I'd suggest they were 'smarter' (in some ways of measuring) than the average adult today. They simply had challenges we don't see.

Communications is a big one. Command and Control today is simple compared to Civil War or Roman Empire. Imagine commanding a battle when communications are exchanged at foot speed or, at best, signal flags & bugle calls. Imagine planning the battle on maps when distances were measured in cubits and map borders had some form of "Here be Monsters". Imagine the logistics of war when few are literate and you can't store food for any significant length of time.

I think we underestimate the challenges our ancestors met and overcame.

huttj509
2012-03-26, 06:34 PM
Another thing is "the oldest trick in the book" scenarios are often old and well known because they were used, and worked. I mean, what will happen in the next 50 years that we would never have expected? I dunno, but in 100 years they'll be saying it was obvious.

"No, we didn't think anyone would actually march ELEPHANTS over the MOUNTAINS! That's not an easy path, and it'd be INSANE!"

"Sir, we found a dead officer who drifted ashore and he had plans for an attack, we have them now!" *attack comes from a completely different direction as the corpse, officer history, and plans were all planted to draw off the defense*

fusilier
2012-03-26, 09:03 PM
Historically, we have problems with many sources. During certain historical periods flattery and hyperbole were very common. Exaggerating the enemy's numbers, increasing casualties, recasting the story so that it parallels classical myths, etc. were techniques that could be used in "retelling" the event. The opposite could be done as well; Machiavelli is notorious for severely underreporting casualties, and recasting what were hard fought battles as bloodless affairs.

We know this because sometimes more detailed accounts, closer to the source have survived -- but the chroniclers' stories are the ones that became widespread, distorting our view of history.

Even nowadays, enemy casualties can be over-reported (unintentionally), during WW1 (and I suspect WW2), casualties might be purposely under-reported (or difficult to gather and categorize). Perception biases can come into play, and even the general course of a battle may be reported differently by different sides.

Air combat is particularly bad. I typically won't trust an account of an air battle unless it's verified by someone on the opposite side.

I read this webpage whenever I need to remind myself of how unreliable a one-sided account may be. It is a long article about the Italian air corps serving during the Battle of Britain (and the months following). It includes a description of a large air battle between Italian Biplanes and Hawker Hurricanes. It's amazing the details that are reported, but when compared with the accounts from the other side, simply could not have happened. I don't think there was any intentional embellishment, or exaggeration -- I think it's just part of how humans observe events in very stressful situations.

http://surfcity.kund.dalnet.se/falco_bob.htm

So when dealing with historical events we have several problems. When faced with something that doesn't make too much sense, or seems very unlikely, my initial response is to give the source the benefit of the doubt, while at the same time, trying to keep a degree of skepticism. It's possible that whoever wrote embellished or exaggerated intentionally (or quoted from a source that did so). It's also possible that the writer wasn't familiar with the subject and didn't communicate it well, because he didn't understand it himself. There's potentially some bias present as well. However, on the other hand it may be difficult to understand, because we don't live in those times -- we don't have the daily issues, the same background, the same kind of education (not level, kind), that our ancient ancestors had. We lack some knowledge that they assumed everybody knew. Also, we may not "think" as they did, which can make it hard to understand what is trying to be communicated.

Roxxy
2012-03-26, 09:22 PM
I've been working on a Pathfinder campaign setting where guns have completely replaced armor and shunned swords into a secondary role. These guns are fairly advanced, and roughly comparable to an M1 Garand in capability (Automatic weapons exist, but they are massive. There are heavy machine guns, but no sub-machine guns.). These guns have a good amount of wooden furniture. Now for the question.

What woods would this wooden furniture normally be made of? How would California coast redwood fare if used as rifle furniture? I bring this up because I am from California, and have been bringing some California elements into an area of the setting. I thought it would be cool if this area had an elite military unit that, as a badge of the honor of belonging to the unit, was issued rifles made out of the area's finest redwood instead of the rifles issued to common soldiers, what with redwood trees being highly iconic to the area. The question is, does using redwood for rifle furniture make a poor rifle?

Straybow
2012-03-26, 11:09 PM
It doesn't matter much. A few kinds of wood are too weak or light to make a lasting rifle stock. Other than that it just depends on how much money one wishes to spend. And then there is simple prestige. There are $100k Purdeys in burled walnut, and there are $1k Winchesters in burled walnut. I'd be hard pressed to say the Purdey is 100 times as good as the Winchester, but you certainly wouldn't equip anybody but an elite with one.

gkathellar
2012-03-26, 11:33 PM
"No, we didn't think anyone would actually march ELEPHANTS over the MOUNTAINS! That's not an easy path, and it'd be INSANE!"

"Okay, that lunatic and his elephants aren't stopping us again. Everyone: attach trumpet companies to your columns. We'll use the loud noise to herd the elephants between our columns and right off the battlefield, and circle the cavalry around to flank them while they think they've got us on the run."

Scipio gets way too little credit. The elephant-herding thing alone ...


What woods would this wooden furniture normally be made of?

Live-oak might be too heavy, but IIRC per-pound it's as strong as steel.

Storm Bringer
2012-03-27, 08:42 AM
I've been working on a Pathfinder campaign setting where guns have completely replaced armor and shunned swords into a secondary role. These guns are fairly advanced, and roughly comparable to an M1 Garand in capability (Automatic weapons exist, but they are massive. There are heavy machine guns, but no sub-machine guns.). These guns have a good amount of wooden furniture. Now for the question.

What woods would this wooden furniture normally be made of? How would California coast redwood fare if used as rifle furniture? I bring this up because I am from California, and have been bringing some California elements into an area of the setting. I thought it would be cool if this area had an elite military unit that, as a badge of the honor of belonging to the unit, was issued rifles made out of the area's finest redwood instead of the rifles issued to common soldiers, what with redwood trees being highly iconic to the area. The question is, does using redwood for rifle furniture make a poor rifle?

I must point out that being able to make a self loading rilfe requires a an equally complex action to a automatic rifle (technically, it's exactly the same, apart form the hammer not being released automatically at the end of the cycle). Historically, they made man portable LMGs before they made semi-auto rifles (1918 era BAR or Lewis gun vs 1940 era Garand or G43).

but to answer the question, no, redwoods would make a fine stock wood.

Mike_G
2012-03-27, 10:39 AM
I must point out that being able to make a self loading rilfe requires a an equally complex action to a automatic rifle (technically, it's exactly the same, apart form the hammer not being released automatically at the end of the cycle). Historically, they made man portable LMGs before they made semi-auto rifles (1918 era BAR or Lewis gun vs 1940 era Garand or G43).

but to answer the question, no, redwoods would make a fine stock wood.

Yes, technically.

But, military doctrine can drive design. Medium or heavy machine guns for defending a position might be part of military doctrine, like artillery, which is how the first machine guns were used. Gatlings, maxims, and so on.

But maybe the army doesn't want to have the average infantryman carrying an automatic weapon, for supply purposes. The idea of conserving ammo kept the US army with breech loaders long after reliable magazine rifles were available.

So, maybe they encouraged semi automatic rifles, but not light machine guns, or submachineguns.

It can work with a little creative storytelling.

No brains
2012-03-27, 12:39 PM
"Okay, that lunatic and his elephants aren't stopping us again. Everyone: attach trumpet companies to your columns. We'll use the loud noise to herd the elephants between our columns and right off the battlefield, and circle the cavalry around to flank them while they think they've got us on the run."

Scipio gets way too little credit. The elephant-herding thing alone ...

I thought the predominant strategy for dealing with elephants was to run flaming pigs at them to make them flip out.

Roxxy
2012-03-27, 01:11 PM
Yes, technically.

But, military doctrine can drive design. Medium or heavy machine guns for defending a position might be part of military doctrine, like artillery, which is how the first machine guns were used. Gatlings, maxims, and so on.

But maybe the army doesn't want to have the average infantryman carrying an automatic weapon, for supply purposes. The idea of conserving ammo kept the US army with breech loaders long after reliable magazine rifles were available.

So, maybe they encouraged semi automatic rifles, but not light machine guns, or submachineguns.

It can work with a little creative storytelling.I'm using the explanation that problems with weight, overheating, and ammunition capacity with hand held autos just haven't been solved yet, and technology has advanced along slightly different avenues than the real world, meaning that the same cooling tech that was around IRL hasn't quite been figured out.

Hawkfrost000
2012-03-27, 01:25 PM
new thread time? :smallconfused:

DM

Yora
2012-03-27, 03:44 PM
Well into page 50 again. Time for a new thread once more.
Yes, I think so. :smallbiggrin:

fusilier
2012-03-27, 05:35 PM
I must point out that being able to make a self loading rilfe requires a an equally complex action to a automatic rifle (technically, it's exactly the same, apart form the hammer not being released automatically at the end of the cycle). Historically, they made man portable LMGs before they made semi-auto rifles (1918 era BAR or Lewis gun vs 1940 era Garand or G43).

Not exactly. Heavy machine guns certainly predate semi-auto rifles, but the first semi-auto's developed around the same time as the first light machine guns. The Mondragon rifle was introduced in 1908. France had actually adopted a semi-automatic 7mm rifle just prior to WW1 as a standard infantry arm! The outbreak of war cancelled those plans (not enough time to retool factories quickly for both ammo and rifle production), but they eventually introduced the RSC semi-auto in 1917 as a support weapon.

On the other hand, many of these rifles could, and were, used in full auto. A small magazine capacity typically prevents overheating, although overheating is often a problem with all machine guns and can be addressed with proper training. A weapon intended as a semi-automatic rifle, however, would probably be too light to use as a full-automatic, i.e. the recoil would be too difficult to control.

Thiel
2012-03-28, 01:11 AM
The Royal Danish Navy introduced the Madsen-Rasmussen M1896 semi automatic rifle in 1896, ten years before they got the Madsen LMG.

Morithias
2012-03-28, 01:29 AM
This is going to sound a tiny bit non-d&d but...

Given the level of armor and weapon technology in the 3rd edition D&D books, (full plates, seige engines, etc). At the current time of the most advance non-variant weapons and armor technology. How advanced in real life would gunpowder and musket technology be.

For example, at the time of the creation and mass production of the full plate in europe, how advanced could a blacksmith using the same level of production technology create a mundane musket.

Basically can I justify my 24 intelligence artificer mass producing muskets for my kingdom's soldiers, without having to have her first invent a time machine.

endoperez
2012-03-28, 01:45 AM
Basically can I justify my 24 intelligence artificer mass producing muskets for my kingdom's soldiers, without having to have her first invent a time machine.

Gothic plate existed in the 15th Century. The arquebus existed in the 15th Century. Plate armour co-existed with firearms, and was tested (proofed) against bullets.

However, firearms don't exist in most D&D settings, so the point is moot. If the necessary knowledge doesn't exist, the fact that the necessary tools and skills exist is moot.

You can always ask your DM. Muskets change the warfield quite a lot, but perhaps he'd allow hand cannons (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hand_cannon), perhaps adapted to throwing alchemical substances over longer ranges.

GraaEminense
2012-03-28, 04:23 AM
If the necessary knowledge doesn't exist, the fact that the necessary tools and skills exist is moot.
Repeated for emphasis. And I'll add: If the necessary motivation doesn't exist, having the rest doesn't help much.

Technological breakthroughs are usually the result of more than just the ability to do something. For some reason seeing the potential (positive or negative) in what you have before you has proven exceedingly difficult without the benefit of hindsight -or a time machine.

The Greeks and Romans knew of the steam engine concept, but never used it.
The Incas knew of the wheel, and did the same.
Evidence points to our ancestors taking quite some time before they found out that the horse could be used for something more than a milkless, weaker cow.
Once they did, the stirrup needed to make horsemen into knights took ages to appear despite being a very simple design.

Just because the technology to do something exists does not make it obvious that it can be done. Even today, with us being more open to bold new solutions than ever, why-didn't-I-think-of-that ways to do things still crop up constantly, making me wonder what else we have missed.

So, regarding the D&D muskets... as GM, I wouldn't allow it unless most of the concepts were already known in the setting, despite the technology level. Soldiers to whom the concept of gunpowder is alien would make awful arquebusiers, and early gunpowder is volatile and fragile stuff in the hands of laymen.

Bombs, however, eventually followed by grenades and maybe Chinese-style rocket-powered spears could be possible on a limited scale if an alchemist was able to crack the secret of gunpowder and someone ambitious and brainy was around to use it.

Morithias
2012-03-28, 04:41 AM
I see...then perhaps I will have to talk to him then. Shouldn't be too hard, the video game the campaign is based off of had them.

GraaEminense
2012-03-28, 04:59 AM
If they exist in the setting, equipping troops with hand cannons or arquebuses should be possible. Mass production to equip whole armies, however, require specialized industry on a level unlikely in a late medieval/early renaissance society. Especially since gunpowder is difficult to produce and keep in quantity.

Spiryt
2012-03-28, 05:19 AM
This is going to sound a tiny bit non-d&d but...

Given the level of armor and weapon technology in the 3rd edition D&D books, (full plates, seige engines, etc). At the current time of the most advance non-variant weapons and armor technology. How advanced in real life would gunpowder and musket technology be.

.

15th century European metallurgy and stuff was more than perfectly sufficient to make AK-47, even though it would be a bit of a fuzz, and of course mass production for 200$ each wouldn't be possible.

It's simply not any rocket science in any kind. Some metal containers, springs, levers....

Idea, knowledge, to form such working idea is everything, not technology per se.

Obviously no one, no matter how genius, is going to build AK-47-like something before modern cartridges, repetitive fire systems and so on aren't devised in the first place.

Diamondeye
2012-03-28, 10:54 AM
Yes, technically.

But, military doctrine can drive design. Medium or heavy machine guns for defending a position might be part of military doctrine, like artillery, which is how the first machine guns were used. Gatlings, maxims, and so on.

But maybe the army doesn't want to have the average infantryman carrying an automatic weapon, for supply purposes. The idea of conserving ammo kept the US army with breech loaders long after reliable magazine rifles were available.

So, maybe they encouraged semi automatic rifles, but not light machine guns, or submachineguns.

It can work with a little creative storytelling.

This is true. In fact, it's the reason that the M-16 and most M-4 in later versions have a "burst" selection rather than full automatic. It's to prevent the temptation to flip to full auto and go to town.

Initially, the full automatic function was really for suppressive fire. However, the SAW was later introduced. The SAW is issued to a soldier as his individual weapon unlike a larger machine gun and can be used as a rifle, but is heavy enough and designed for belt-fed operation to act as a (small) crew-served weapon as well. With 2 SAWs per infantry squad, the need for a full-automatic feature was eliminated (and was questionable int he first place; a soldier can pull a semi-auto trigger or use a burst fire feature to suppress pretty well, and it will last longer than full auto fire.)

Recoil on a full-automatic rifle or carbine isn't excessively hard to control; in fact most video games exaggerate it. However, it's also not necessary for most infantry combat. What it's useful for is suppressive fire(already discussed) and close quarters fighting where there may not be time to pick up a sight picture or aim carefully at a moving target. 25 meters is about the absolute maximum for effective engagement of individual targets with full automatic rifle fire. Farther than that, you should be using aimed shots. Really, you want to be even closer than that, and generally inside buildings you will be.

Joran
2012-03-28, 12:49 PM
15th century European metallurgy and stuff was more than perfectly sufficient to make AK-47, even though it would be a bit of a fuzz, and of course mass production for 200$ each wouldn't be possible.

It's simply not any rocket science in any kind. Some metal containers, springs, levers....

Idea, knowledge, to form such working idea is everything, not technology per se.

Obviously no one, no matter how genius, is going to build AK-47-like something before modern cartridges, repetitive fire systems and so on aren't devised in the first place.

Wouldn't a AK-47 foul up if fired with black powder? Going to a smokeless powder is a non-trivial step that requires a fair bit of chemistry to do it right.

I wouldn't be surprised if 1600's-1700's engineers could put together something like the Sten gun, especially looking at those old fuseé pocketwatches that are really intricate inside.

The two innovations in firearms that seem so simple that they should have been invented earlier than they actually were are the flintlock and the Minié ball.

Roxxy
2012-03-28, 01:25 PM
Don't forget that black powder has more power than most smokeless powders.

DrewID
2012-03-28, 01:30 PM
15th century European metallurgy and stuff was more than perfectly sufficient to make AK-47, even though it would be a bit of a fuzz, and of course mass production for 200$ each wouldn't be possible.

I have to question this assertion, in light of the number of works that have stated that the delay in the adoption of breech loaders was the inability of the metallurgy of the day to seal the breech properly. And if you cannot seal the breech properly, you are not going to have an effective gas-operated repeater.

And a related question that I have wondered abut: what level of technology would be required to produce mercury fulminate primers?

DrewID

Spiryt
2012-03-28, 02:31 PM
I have to question this assertion, in light of the number of works that have stated that the delay in the adoption of breech loaders was the inability of the metallurgy of the day to seal the breech properly. And if you cannot seal the breech properly, you are not going to have an effective gas-operated repeater.


And yet, breech loaders were known as far back as in 14th century. Air guns in 16th century... Modern machining can certainly cut/cast well fitting parts more readily, but back then it could be done as well - again, obviously as rather precise and expensive piece of work.

Problems with powder would be indeed biggest one - although technologically it would most probably be easily attainable in 15th century - nitric acid, sulfuric acid, sodium carbonate and so on were known from quite some time, processes they need to go trough wouldn't be above the capabilities of some alchemist workshop...

Obviously, no matter how high 'Intelligence" would someone have, coming up with all of that stuff before more advanced chemistry and what else had happened to give him fundamental 'base' - would be snowball chance in hell, to say at least. Maybe with some freak accident, maybe....

Thiel
2012-03-28, 03:09 PM
And yet, breech loaders were known as far back as in 14th century. Air guns in 16th century... Modern machining can certainly cut/cast well fitting parts more readily, but back then it could be done as well - again, obviously as rather precise and expensive piece of work.
And they were cranky, unreliable, comparatively fragile and didn't have the power of their muzzle loaded cousins.

No brains
2012-03-28, 07:50 PM
I thought the predominant strategy for dealing with elephants was to run flaming pigs at them to make them flip out.

I was serious. I had sworn I've heard that somewhere.

Sorry, GraaEminense.

Gwyn chan 'r Gwyll
2012-03-28, 10:32 PM
I was serious. I had sworn I've heard that somewhere.

Sorry, GraaEminense.

Nope. Pretty certain that's a myth, or it was used once and then never again.

Talakeal
2012-03-28, 10:36 PM
Nope. Pretty certain that's a myth, or it was used once and then never again.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_pig claims it did happen at Megara in 266 BC, but that doesn't rule out either of the above possibilities.

GraaEminense
2012-03-29, 04:07 AM
I was serious. I had sworn I've heard that somewhere.

Sorry, GraaEminense.
I'm sure you are forgiven, not quite sure for what though?

Regarding the flaming pigs, I've always considered it an event that was tried once at Megara. Can't have been terribly effective if it wasn't used regularly, and there's no mention of it in later times while war elephants kept on being used in the region.
On a side note, Caesar's most important tool to defeat elephants in the civil war was another elephant: keeping it in camp so the soldiers got used to the huge animal.

Autolykos
2012-03-29, 04:58 AM
Wouldn't a AK-47 foul up if fired with black powder? Going to a smokeless powder is a non-trivial step that requires a fair bit of chemistry to do it right.While nitrocellulose is definitely the better option for smokeless powder, for example a mix of powdered sugar and sodium (per-)chlorate, which can be made from table salt once you have electricity, would probably work as well. Still, pretty hard to discover by accident - but there are plenty other alternatives as well, and you only need to find one of them.


I was serious. I had sworn I've heard that somewhere.I'm pretty sure it was in Rome:TotalWar, where this is one of the methods to fight elephants. I prefer massed archers and artillery because they are also useful for lots of other purposes, but the pigs are an option.

Thiel
2012-03-29, 07:32 AM
I'm pretty sure it was in Rome:TotalWar, where this is one of the methods to fight elephants. I prefer massed archers and artillery because they are also useful for lots of other purposes, but the pigs are an option.

Plus, they're hilarious

DrewID
2012-03-29, 03:47 PM
I'm pretty sure it was in Rome:TotalWar, where this is one of the methods to fight elephants. I prefer massed archers and artillery because they are also useful for lots of other purposes, but the pigs are an option.

Flaming pigs have another purpose. It's called BBQ.

DrewID

Galloglaich
2012-03-30, 08:36 AM
15th century European metallurgy and stuff was more than perfectly sufficient to make AK-47, even though it would be a bit of a fuzz, and of course mass production for 200$ each wouldn't be possible.

It's simply not any rocket science in any kind. Some metal containers, springs, levers....

Idea, knowledge, to form such working idea is everything, not technology per se.

Obviously no one, no matter how genius, is going to build AK-47-like something before modern cartridges, repetitive fire systems and so on aren't devised in the first place.

In fact to build upon what he said, I remember seeing a documentary one time showing a village in a tribal area of Pakistan which has traditionally been a center of a very archaic iron-working industry. Traditional sword and knife makers were making Ak-47s and RPK machine guns there using basically medieval forges and tools. The same guys had figured out how to make Muskets in the 19th Century during the British occupation of the area.

G.

Galloglaich
2012-03-30, 08:45 AM
This is going to sound a tiny bit non-d&d but...

Given the level of armor and weapon technology in the 3rd edition D&D books, (full plates, seige engines, etc). At the current time of the most advance non-variant weapons and armor technology. How advanced in real life would gunpowder and musket technology be.

For example, at the time of the creation and mass production of the full plate in europe, how advanced could a blacksmith using the same level of production technology create a mundane musket.

Basically can I justify my 24 intelligence artificer mass producing muskets for my kingdom's soldiers, without having to have her first invent a time machine.

By the time plate armor came out, firearms were well established in Europe. In the height of plate armor, say early 16th Century, matchlock muskets were already a popular weapon and wheel-lock pistols were coming on the scene. Most people don't seem to understand this for some reason I can't grasp.

I remember on that idiotic show Deadliest Warriors, in the pirate vs. knight episode, they made a big deal about how the pirate had guns but the knight didn't. Actually by the mid 16th Century it was common for knights to carry pistols on their saddles along with a sword... in fact a lot of German knights used to carry up to six pistols instead of a lance. Polish Winged Hussars carried both.

G

Galloglaich
2012-03-30, 08:50 AM
If they exist in the setting, equipping troops with hand cannons or arquebuses should be possible. Mass production to equip whole armies, however, require specialized industry on a level unlikely in a late medieval/early renaissance society. Especially since gunpowder is difficult to produce and keep in quantity.

Actually that isn't true. It's amazing to me the myths that persist about the Middle Ages. They were mass producing all kinds of weapons and armor by the 14th Century. The Arsenal at Venice was producing thousands of guns per year by the 15th C with basically all the technology of a modern factory, interchangable parts, an assembly-line, automation etc. Automated production (based on hydro power) was widespread throughout Europe by that time.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venetian_Arsenal

As for the powder, they came up with corned powder by the mid 15th Century, that was the real step which allowed them to pre-measure out loads which quickly became cartridges, a pre-measured load of powder, with a primer and a ball, just like you saw in the 19th Century.

Breech loaders were very common by the same time period (mid 15th C) and were neither unreliable nor weak, they just only used them for relatively small cannons, in the 15mm - 80mm range very roughly. Some larger than that were used but that is where it got tricky. The main reason for breach loaders is that you could reload without putting powder down a hot gun barrel. They would often have several breeches ready with powder in them, which looked a little like beer mugs, and would take the old breach off and put the new one on, drop a ball down the barrel and fire. This was very common in the Baltic on ships and river-boats.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/6c/Breech_loading_swivel_guns_15th_16th_century.jpg/640px-Breech_loading_swivel_guns_15th_16th_century.jpg

Here are some examples, all without the breach in them. on the bottom you can see one of the breeches. Some of the guns are made in 'hoop' style, some forged in a single piece. Both technologies were available in the 15th Century, the latter worked better but was more expensive and required a very skilled gunsmith to forge.

An improvement on this was pioneered in Flanders in the 15th C where early use of coal led to some of the first true Blast Furnaces in Europe and the subsequent use of cast iron, which was used by the Duke of Burgundy to very good effect with large cast iron cannon that could fire lead balls.

G

Yora
2012-03-30, 08:51 AM
I remember on that idiotic show Deadliest Warriors, in the pirate vs. knight episode, they made a big deal about how the pirate had guns but the knight didn't.
Well, there's your problem.

I pretty much have stoped entirely watching american "documentaries". They are almost all complete garbage. Don't recall ever seeing anything by History Channel that didn't suck.

Galloglaich
2012-03-30, 09:03 AM
Yeah we aren't making many friends with American Media these days I think. Jersey Shore probably does more to recruit enemies of the US than predator drones do.

Well at least we still make decent zombie movies once in a while...

G

Mike_G
2012-03-30, 01:15 PM
Yeah we aren't making many friends with American Media these days I think. Jersey Shore probably does more to recruit enemies of the US than predator drones do.

Well at least we still make decent zombie movies once in a while...

G

I often refer to the Real Housewives franchise as "al Qaeda recruiting films."

No brains
2012-03-30, 08:28 PM
I pretty much have stoped entirely watching american "documentaries". They are almost all complete garbage. Don't recall ever seeing anything by History Channel that didn't suck.

Don't talk crap about Mythbusters!:smallsmile:

By the time I comment a thread has officially derailed. :smalltongue:
As for the apology, your avatar is a piggy.

Who's going to start the new thread? Don't let it be me!

fusilier
2012-03-31, 01:30 AM
Well, there's your problem.

I pretty much have stoped entirely watching american "documentaries". They are almost all complete garbage. Don't recall ever seeing anything by History Channel that didn't suck.

While not as common, PBS productions are usually good. NOVA is typically excellent -- historical documentaries can be hit or miss, but Secrets of the Dead is typically pretty good, and History Detectives can be fun.

I'll take a PBS documentary over any of the cable channels' productions, any day of the week -- but there's not as many of them. :-(

Sometimes the cable channels surprise me, for example Mike Loades latest documentary, although that wasn't an American production, and it was really really condensed.

fusilier
2012-03-31, 02:08 AM
Breech loaders were very common by the same time period (mid 15th C) and were neither unreliable nor weak, they just only used them for relatively small cannons, in the 15mm - 80mm range very roughly. Some larger than that were used but that is where it got tricky. The main reason for breach loaders is that you could reload without putting powder down a hot gun barrel. They would often have several breeches ready with powder in them, which looked a little like beer mugs, and would take the old breach off and put the new one on, drop a ball down the barrel and fire. This was very common in the Baltic on ships and river-boats.

As far as I know breechloading swivel guns were popular upon all European ships, until sometime around the mid 17th century (where muzzle loading ones became dominant). In the 15th century, they may be the only cannons on a ship. By the middle of the 16th century heavier cannon were being used, but the small swivel guns were still part of the armament of most ships, as they could be very useful ini a boarding action.

They were also sometimes used as light field guns on land -- typically on some sort of a frame instead of a wheeled carriage.

Diamondeye
2012-03-31, 04:07 AM
15th century technology would be exceedingly hard-pressed to make an AK-47. It is not simply a matter of making a breach loader, but rather one that can repeat at a cyclic rate of 600 rounds per minute, and be accurate in single shot ode out to 400 meters with a muzzle velocity of 715 meters per second. Machining all the various parts of an AK-47 to the necessary tolerances should be very hard for 15th century technology, especially if they have never seen an example of an AK-47 when they make their first one.

This is why the remote village in Pakistan can make AK-47s and repair parts for them. They already know AK-47s exist and have seen them before. it's simply a matter of obtaining the necessary specifications, and it's not like it's hard to get your hands on an AK-47 to take apart and figure out.

It's much easier to make something once you know it can be made even if you don't have any working examples. This is why North Korea and Iran (or for that matter, India, Pakistan, South Africa, and Israel) don't need to start from scratch to make the atomic bomb. They already know it works.

Spiryt
2012-03-31, 04:39 AM
15th century technology would be exceedingly hard-pressed to make an AK-47. It is not simply a matter of making a breach loader, but rather one that can repeat at a cyclic rate of 600 rounds per minute, and be accurate in single shot ode out to 400 meters with a muzzle velocity of 715 meters per second. Machining all the various parts of an AK-47 to the necessary tolerances should be very hard for 15th century technology, especially if they have never seen an example of an AK-47 when they make their first one.

This is why the remote village in Pakistan can make AK-47s and repair parts for them. They already know AK-47s exist and have seen them before. it's simply a matter of obtaining the necessary specifications, and it's not like it's hard to get your hands on an AK-47 to take apart and figure out.

It's much easier to make something once you know it can be made even if you don't have any working examples. This is why North Korea and Iran (or for that matter, India, Pakistan, South Africa, and Israel) don't need to start from scratch to make the atomic bomb. They already know it works.

Well, that was pretty much precisely my point.... Technologically, it's really nothing that hard.

But probability that someone, no matter how bright, will come up with all that stuff from blank, seeing only 'standard' cylindrical, black powder, one shot arquebuses, bombards, swivel guns of 15th century...

Just no way, little by little all that stuff had to be devised and tried.

And yeah, next thread please!

http://suptg.thisisnotatrueending.com/archive/14785908/images/1304336338076.jpg

hamishspence
2012-03-31, 06:25 AM
And yeah, next thread please!

Thread X (http://www.giantitp.com/forums/showthread.php?t=238042)