Army First Glance

Started by miketr, July 01, 2011, 09:32:25 AM

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Carthaginian

Yes, Korpen, I speak largely of what I know- the US system.

I do agree that conscription like you suggest only works in a situation with certain circumstances- a nation with a tenuous situation, a devoted populace, a strong moral identity, and an overriding sense of duty.
Not many nations get this right.
ATM, the only one I can think if is Israel.
So 'ere's to you, Fuzzy-Wuzzy, at your 'ome in old Baghdad;
You're a pore benighted 'eathen but a first-class fightin' man;
We gives you your certificate, an' if you want it signed
We'll come an' 'ave a romp with you whenever you're inclined.

Korpen

Quote from: Carthaginian on July 02, 2011, 10:13:54 PM
Yes, Korpen, I speak largely of what I know- the US system.

I do agree that conscription like you suggest only works in a situation with certain circumstances- a nation with a tenuous situation, a devoted populace, a strong moral identity, and an overriding sense of duty.
Not many nations get this right.
ATM, the only one I can think if is Israel.

You know, after reading up on the US system, I would hesitate to even call that a conscription system in the European sense at all. The system the US used in fact reminds me of the system used by Sweden in the early day of the thirty years war (1618-1648) in that it was selection for service into an otherwise full-time force and only applied to a minority of the population.

Most conscription systems have worked very well as long as two conditions were fulfilled:
-That the state was seen a legitimate.
-That it was universal (or near so).
After that it is all about other factor, which has little to do with volunteer of compulsory service.
Card-carrying member of the Battlecruiser Fan Club.

Carthaginian

Quote from: Korpen on July 04, 2011, 08:41:15 AM
You know, after reading up on the US system, I would hesitate to even call that a conscription system in the European sense at all. The system the US used in fact reminds me of the system used by Sweden in the early day of the thirty years war (1618-1648) in that it was selection for service into an otherwise full-time force and only applied to a minority of the population.

Excepting the 'applied to only a small portion of the population' part, you're starting to understand it now, Korpen. During major wars like WWI/WWII, only a very small segment of the population was exempted; during more limited ones and during peacetime, the only real 'qualifications' for being conscripted was that you were 1.) over 18 but under a variable upper age limit  2.) unmarried, 3.) not in university and 4.) reasonably healthy- and the married and university exemptions occasionally went away.

So it was really a fairly large pool for general draftees... other, more specialized fields (doctors, nurses, pilots, etc) had their own special rules for conscription due to the nature of their fields.
So 'ere's to you, Fuzzy-Wuzzy, at your 'ome in old Baghdad;
You're a pore benighted 'eathen but a first-class fightin' man;
We gives you your certificate, an' if you want it signed
We'll come an' 'ave a romp with you whenever you're inclined.

Korpen

Quote from: Carthaginian on July 04, 2011, 09:15:30 AM
1.) over 18 but under a variable upper age limit  2.) unmarried, 3.) not in university and 4.) reasonably healthy- and the married and university exemptions occasionally went away.
Those are among the reason why I would be disinclined to call the US draft a conscription system, the large number of people disqualified and the fact that the soldier did no longer belong to a unit after completing the initial training/service period.

In a conscription system the unit you train with continues to stand in the reserve, so at mobilisation you go back to serve with the very same people in the same platoon you did your basic training with.

I also suspect that the fact in true conscription system everyone expect and calculates with doing their year or so of service in the year they become 18 or 19, so there is much less of feeling that it takes them away from something else.
Card-carrying member of the Battlecruiser Fan Club.

Nobody

I think we should remove the year from the name/level of the unit and instead assign a level number to them (only the description should say something like "similar to 1880 units"). Also we should add weaker units (level 0?) "primitive blunt and sharp weapons", not for the players but we could encounter natives who have them.

Reason: Our time an technology might (should) go different ways. Always being told to have e.g. a 1860 army in say 1890 would be counterproductive if no reason to change that occurred in the meantime. Furthermore it might be a good idea to keep the descriptions of the army levels a secret until they have been developed.

Guinness

The years are meant to illustrate real world capabilities. The year in which advances of army capability are introduced would be subject to in-game circumstances.

Nobody

Quote from: Guinness on July 05, 2011, 12:26:23 PM
The years are meant to illustrate real world capabilities. The year in which advances of army capability are introduced would be subject to in-game circumstances.
I know that, and I thought I said that as well. Anyway wouldn't it be much better to relate that to certain developments (weapons & tactics) rather than years?


Unrelated to that, is it possible that the chosen years relate some American developments? Especially the 1860 & 80s comparison? For Europe (or rather Prussian) dates like 1840-50 (needle ignition rifles), 1872 (metal cartridges), 1884 (multi-shot) and 1888 (smokeless powder) might be the important cornerstones.

miketr

Quote from: Nobody on July 06, 2011, 07:18:42 AM
Quote from: Guinness on July 05, 2011, 12:26:23 PM
The years are meant to illustrate real world capabilities. The year in which advances of army capability are introduced would be subject to in-game circumstances.
I know that, and I thought I said that as well. Anyway wouldn't it be much better to relate that to certain developments (weapons & tactics) rather than years?


Unrelated to that, is it possible that the chosen years relate some American developments? Especially the 1860 & 80s comparison? For Europe (or rather Prussian) dates like 1840-50 (needle ignition rifles), 1872 (metal cartridges), 1884 (multi-shot) and 1888 (smokeless powder) might be the important cornerstones.

What you are talking about here is what is known as FLAVOR TEXT.

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

We are not going to get bogged down in terms people having X gun, rifle, etc.  The tech level trumps.

Michael

Korpen

#53
Quote from: miketr on July 06, 2011, 10:41:53 AM
What you are talking about here is what is known as FLAVOR TEXT.

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

We are not going to get bogged down in terms people having X gun, rifle, etc.  The tech level trumps.
I do not see Nobodys question like that; but rather a question about why some of those years were selected.
For example: Together with smokeless gunpowder, the introduction of quick firing artillery in 1897 was probably the most revolutionary thing in land warfare since gunpowder.   However in seems a bit early to call it a 1895 tech, and a bit late to call it 1905.
So would it not make sense to basically pack the increments a bit tighter in the early part of the table with 1880-1890-1900 as the tech level years to better match the truly game-changing techs?
The fairly tight increases would also reflect that the period 1880-1900 is probably the period of the most radical changes to land warfare ever.
Card-carrying member of the Battlecruiser Fan Club.

ctwaterman

*laughs*

Ok Korpen does have a point but man that is going to be a seriously painful amount of work.... :P :'(
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Nobody

I have a rather simple idea against the "decimal point problem":
Instead of using multiplicative factors (1.1 for Regulars, 0.8 for Reserve, 0.9 for Divisions and 0.75 for Brigades) lets use additive modifiers (+10% for Regulars, -20% for Reserve, -10% for Divisions and -25% for Brigades).
The result looks like this (I also added an additional lower level):

   Army Corp         Division         Brigade      
level   Regular   Conscript   Reserve   Regular   Conscript   Reserve   Regular   Conscript   Reserve
0   110   100   80   50   45   35   8,5   7,5   5,5
I   220   200   160   100   90   70   17   15   11
II   330   300   240   150   135   105   25,5   22,5   16,5
III   440   400   320   200   180   140   34   30   22
IV   550   500   400   250   225   175   42,5   37,5   27,5
V   660   600   480   300   270   210   51   45   33
VI   770   700   560   350   315   245   59,5   52,5   38,5
VII   880   800   640   400   360   280   68   60   44

   Cavalry Corp         Division         Brigade      
level   Regular   Conscript   Reserve   Regular   Conscript   Reserve   Regular   Conscript   Reserve
0   90   80   60   40   45   25   6,5   7,5   3,5
I   180   160   120   80   90   50   13   15   7
II   270   240   180   120   135   75   19,5   22,5   10,5
III   360   320   240   160   180   100   26   30   14
IV   450   400   300   200   225   125   32,5   37,5   17,5
V   540   480   360   240   270   150   39   45   21
VI   630   560   420   280   315   175   45,5   52,5   24,5
VII   720   640   480   320   360   200   52   60   28

And if we reduce the malus for Brigades to 20% we can eliminate the decimal points altogether:

   Brigade      
level   Regular   Conscript   Reserve
0   9   8   6
I   18   16   12
II   27   24   18
III   36   32   24
IV   45   40   30
V   54   48   36
VI   63   56   42
VII   72   64   48

Cavalry   Brigade      
level   Regular   Conscript   Reserve
0   7   8   4
I   14   16   8
II   21   24   12
III   28   32   16
IV   35   40   20
V   42   48   24
VI   49   56   28
VII   56   64   32


@Korpen
I actually meant both.

@Mike
That might be, but so are your years. Only that it makes much more sense to use technology and tactics instead of arbitrarily chosen years which don't really seem to fit to any sort of "milestone" at all.

@ctwaterman
Really? I mean, "how hard can it be?"
I already mentioned some, and if all name few more we should be done in no time, shouldn't we?

Carthaginian

Years... Tech Levels... WHO CARES- BOTH ARE ARBITRARY!

The years are there so people will have a general idea of when a given tech becomes available. Your tech levels do not offer anything for people just to 'grab hold of' and know about where they stand in comparison to OTL forces.
Even though my nation will have pinfire rifles initially, then single-shot bolt--action rifles, etc- following the European model rather than the American one- I have absolutely no problem with years being used rather than random numbers without any frame of reference. Even if I had an American based army in a system where the years are based on more on the European development chain, I would prefer years as a benchmark than levels.

One guy's 'milestones' might mean nothing to anyone else... but a milestone is better than an abstract.
So 'ere's to you, Fuzzy-Wuzzy, at your 'ome in old Baghdad;
You're a pore benighted 'eathen but a first-class fightin' man;
We gives you your certificate, an' if you want it signed
We'll come an' 'ave a romp with you whenever you're inclined.

ctwaterman

Actually....

The charts nobody posted could be useful thats up to debate.

But the Research for what historical levels are needed and where was the difficult part.

The Years between the US Civil War and say 1905 are chock full of military advances especially in the Army Era...

The Years before were picked for Basically everyone has breach loading Weapons and some artillary
to Everyone has a smokeless powder Mauser Knock Off more artillary and a few machine guns, gatling guns or such.

Charles
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