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Homba

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    Jackson, Mississippi, USA
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  1. However this works, I'd love to get in on it. Is there an email or site we can send to/look at for more info? Homba
  2. Incredible forum- check it out and sign up. Not just a forum, but a com-link! Instant messaging- click the little red 'IM' !!! Homba
  3. Steve, The MG solutions you proposed (tweaked Run characteristics, Assault Move, and 'go for broke' MG) above are excellent. My loyalty/respect meters are likewise through the roof. Homba
  4. Im sure "angling the barrel up" is nothing fancy for a dug-in MG... probably standard practice or else you are shooting at ankles. In any case it must come into the calculation somewhere and to some extent, and this is going to increase effective grazing fire range. Surely someone can provide a reference on muzzel velocities of WWII machine guns? We have one first hand account from the other thread of MG bullets' 'cracking' sound as they broke the sound barrier passing overhead (though IIRC this was a more modern MG.) Homba
  5. ... (edit) let a post sit on your desktop for a few minutes before submitting and it quickly becomes obsolete! H [ 04-16-2001: Message edited by: Homba ]
  6. I agree with Colonel. It would even be nice to fire a few HE shells into TWO houses during one turn, than being forced to fire at one house for the entire turn. Ammo conservation must have been taken into consideration sometimes. Why not allow multiple area-fire commands (smoke or HE), and have the unit switch off between them unit the end of the round? I have always found it quite limiting to have to use ~1/5 of my HE load on a single house for recon-by-fire purposes. A pause before area-firing helps... multiple area-targeting would also help. This way you could spread five or six shells down a woodline, instead of being forced to put them all in one place. Homba
  7. I'd say you probably paid for a serviced and running tank at the start of a battle. Having a tank start broke-down, or break down on the first turn, is not much fun, and could even be decisive to the outcome. This must be considered before something is instituted where tanks start breaking down left and right. If they are prone to engine problems, this should be reflected in the price, and the player should also be able to mitigate the effect by (for example) only using the MOVE command, rather than Move Fast (which might be more likely to cause problems). Breakdown chance should start very low, and then creep up based on total distance moved (rather than what turn it is in the game). Again, I think the player should have some way to mitigate this by "gentle handling" of the tank. The above is only directed to pure engine problems, not throwing tracks in bad terrain, or engines *freezing* in extreme temperatures. I am always fascinated to read about the Germans having to build bonfires under their tanks to thaw the motor oil. Will there be a BUILD BONFIRE command in CM2? hehe My two cents. Homba
  8. Well, everyone is doing a fine job arguing this out. I did keep up with the entire 5 page MG thread, and I have been re-reading parts. As demonstrated there, and here, I am still firmly unconvinced (as are many of the posters here and there) that MG's effects on advancing/moving enemy troops, are correctly modeled. As someone put it: "Something is missing." I imagine it has a lot to do with the oft-discussed lack of ability to fire a prolonged burst at need (when threatened). In Steve's initial response to my post, it seemed that this was acknowledged, and that MGs are being improved upon for CM2. I do hope a little retro-fitting can be arranged for CM1 when the time comes. A CMH story that I read when I was young, and has always stuck with me is of the US soldier knocked unconscious and then playing dead at his .30 cal hole, when his unit was overrun. IIRC this was during the Bulge. He waited for the right moment and then killed scores of germans with his MG before they finally took him out. A counter-attack came through almost immediately after and cleared the position, and the Americans realized what their comrade had done. Nearly tears me up every few years when I remember the story. I am sorry I do not recall his name, and I should look it up. Though real life examples are invaluable, I can quite easily imagine myself in the position of being asked with some squad mates to rush an MG nest 200m away across farmland. (Let's face it guys there is A LOT of terrain out there, meadows, farmland, steppes, etc that is a lot bigger than 20m x 20m and nothing but some grass to break the smoothness.) It is not a pleasant thought. Thanks for the responses, BTS, and keep up the good work on CM2. I wish I knew whether or not you guys kept up with the "Objective Flags- fixes needed" thread. I never emailed you about it because I figure if every crackpot with an idea did that, it would crash your mail server. Homba
  9. Situation: My veteran US army 1917 HMG team waits in a heavy builing on a clear day. The building is located at the bottom of nice little dell, sheltered from enemy heavy weapons. The slopes of the dell rise up in front and to the left. To the right, I can cover a field in front of the entire right flank of my defensive line. This position is to anchor the left side of my right flank. If Enemy infantry approach from the front or left, they will have to come over the lip of the dell and there is no cover for 80m to my house-- where I plan to shred them WWI-style, as they will be unsupported in the open. AAR: One Volks SMG SQUAD (8 men) charged my house at the beginning of a turn. I don't believe these attackers were even 'in command.' As far as the tracer-graphics show, I got off one burst at them at them as they crested the lip of the dell to my front. I proceeded to get 4 bursts in, the last coming when they were about 10m from my house. Bursts were at 90, 65, 35 and 10m- the entire time my veteran HMG team was not pinned, cautious, etc. They were OK or Alerted. Managed to pick off one enemy in the first or second salvo. Got 2 more at the 10m point. The enemy never went to ground or ceased sprinting toward my house (firing an ineffective burst or two from their SMGs) and entered the building with about 15 seconds left in the turn, where each side has lost 1 man in close combat. I am incredulous (to put it mildly) that these 8 attackers were able to quickly, easily, unsuppressed, and at little cost, cross 90m of open ground, while under the concentrated fire of a veteran, unsuppressed HMG team firing from a heavy building-- and I believe MGs should be tweaked up until it would probably require a PLATOON of men (rather than a squad) to frontally assault and take out my position, and not without considerable loss, or possibility of being turned back. The explanation that "open ground doesn't necessarily represent ground devoid of cover," is wholly unsatisfactory. This might explain why a squad PINNED in open ground would not be instantly liquidated by an MG. However, the attackers ran the 90m to my position without pause. They weren't seriously seeking cover. Further, we have Broken, Lt. Woods, Wheat, etc. terrain tiles to represent land "with some cover." Only the rocky Broken terrain is an impediment to vehicles. Vehicles can go full speed over "open groun"- it might as well be a parking lot. Any "hard cover" that might be useful to a squad advancing against an MG position MUST be few and far between judging by the easy at which a vehicle crosses open terrain. For those reasons, I find the argument/explanation of "limited cover" in "open terrain" to be wholly insufficient to explain the ease of the assault on my HMG position. Maybe some members of a resourceful (and probably elite) squad of men could enter my position if they spaced out to a frontage of about 200m+, nearly a full half-arc around my position, and all rushed in at once. I could understand how one MG would have trouble stopping that kind of attack. However, I don't believe this is what is being modeled in CM when a squad rushes a building. Granted there is some spacing, but it is safe to assume the squad (to maintain cohesion) has a frontage of no more than 30m or so? I would posit that 30m is not significant, other than to reduce casualties caused by 1 burst. The 200m front I mentioned above could only be acheived by a 3-squad platoon, and here I would feel real danger to my MG house. I have experienced these incredibly dumbed-down MGs over and over, whether they be in groups or standing alone. I have run tests with ridiculous results. I have read the complaints of countless people here on the forum. I have read about the vicious and unprecedented effect of MGs on the WWI battlefield against "human wave" attacks. I have never heard any good justification on this bb for the current state of MG effectiveness. Until we have a fix, we are going to continue to see the human wave attack used with outrageously unrealistic success. Any squad of men running at an unsuppressed MG from 100-20m range who is firing repeatedly at them have two choices: seek cover or die. Why isn't this modeled correctly in CM? I suggest that crewed MG firepower be increased by 75-100%. Is this outrageous? If doubled, would only 2 (instead of 5) men reached my HMG house? Would the increased firepower forced the attackers to go to ground? I hope so. The attack of this SMG squad should have been suicidal- but instead was an easy success. Are the Russians are going to be hell on wheels OR WHAT in CM2!? Homba
  10. Situation: My veteran US army 1917 HMG team waits in a heavy builing on a clear day. The building is located at the bottom of nice little dell, sheltered from enemy heavy weapons. The slopes of the dell rise up in front and to the left. To the right, I can cover a field in front of the entire right flank of my defensive line. This position is to anchor the left side of my right flank. If Enemy infantry approach from the front or left, they will have to come over the lip of the dell and there is no cover for 80m to my house-- where I plan to shred them WWI-style, as they will be unsupported in the open. AAR: One Volks SMG SQUAD (8 men) charged my house at the beginning of a turn. I don't believe these attackers were even 'in command.' As far as the tracer-graphics show, I got off one burst at them at them as they crested the lip of the dell to my front. I proceeded to get 4 bursts in, the last coming when they were about 10m from my house. Bursts were at 90, 65, 35 and 10m- the entire time my veteran HMG team was not pinned, cautious, etc. They were OK or Alerted. Managed to pick off one enemy in the first or second salvo. Got 2 more at the 10m point. The enemy never went to ground or ceased sprinting toward my house (firing an ineffective burst or two from their SMGs) and entered the building with about 15 seconds left in the turn, where each side has lost 1 man in close combat. I am incredulous (to put it mildly) that these 8 attackers were able to quickly, easily, unsuppressed, and at little cost, cross 90m of open ground, while under the concentrated fire of a veteran, unsuppressed HMG team firing from a heavy building-- and I believe MGs should be tweaked up until it would probably require a PLATOON of men (rather than a squad) to frontally assault and take out my position, and not without considerable loss, or possibility of being turned back. The explanation that "open ground doesn't necessarily represent ground devoid of cover," is wholly unsatisfactory. This might explain why a squad PINNED in open ground would not be instantly liquidated by an MG. However, the attackers ran the 90m to my position without pause. They weren't seriously seeking cover. Further, we have Broken, Lt. Woods, Wheat, etc. terrain tiles to represent land "with some cover." Only the rocky Broken terrain is an impediment to vehicles. Vehicles can go full speed over "open groun"- it might as well be a parking lot. Any "hard cover" that might be useful to a squad advancing against an MG position MUST be few and far between judging by the easy at which a vehicle crosses open terrain. For those reasons, I find the argument/explanation of "limited cover" in "open terrain" to be wholly insufficient to explain the ease of the assault on my HMG position. Maybe some members of a resourceful (and probably elite) squad of men could enter my position if they spaced out to a frontage of about 200m+, nearly a full half-arc around my position, and all rushed in at once. I could understand how one MG would have trouble stopping that kind of attack. However, I don't believe this is what is being modeled in CM when a squad rushes a building. Granted there is some spacing, but it is safe to assume the squad (to maintain cohesion) has a frontage of no more than 30m or so? I would posit that 30m is not significant, other than to reduce casualties caused by 1 burst. The 200m front I mentioned above could only be acheived by a 3-squad platoon, and here I would feel real danger to my MG house. I have experienced these incredibly dumbed-down MGs over and over, whether they be in groups or standing alone. I have run tests with ridiculous results. I have read the complaints of countless people here on the forum. I have read about the vicious and unprecedented effect of MGs on the WWI battlefield against "human wave" attacks. I have never heard any good justification on this bb for the current state of MG effectiveness. Until we have a fix, we are going to continue to see the human wave attack used with outrageously unrealistic success. Any squad of men running at an unsuppressed MG from 100-20m range who is firing repeatedly at them have two choices: seek cover or die. Why isn't this modeled correctly in CM? I suggest that crewed MG firepower be increased by 75-100%. Is this outrageous? If doubled, would only 2 (instead of 5) men reached my HMG house? Would the increased firepower forced the attackers to go to ground? I hope so. The attack of this SMG squad should have been suicidal- but instead was an easy success. Are the Russians are going to be hell on wheels OR WHAT in CM2!? Homba
  11. Sounds like a reasonable complaint to me. Homba
  12. Well, I did the experiment I talked about on page 1 of this thread. My hypothesis (that you'd be a tougher target if you showed less turret) was dead wrong. Turns out no matter how much of a tank's turret is sticking up above a ridge, the chance to hit a head-on shot is the same! I lined up 4 tigers on a ridge, in echelon staggered back down the ridge's reverse slope. My hidden AT guns could see the turrets peeking over the ridge like stairsteps. All targets were "Hull Down"- but my AT guns' chance to hit the tanks was 26% for each and every tank, even though there was a very distinct difference in the amount of turret/upper hull protruding between the first and last tank. So apparently the amount of (front) exposure in the case of a "hull down" target is not modeled in CM. This strikes me as incredible since everything else IS modeled. For example, (as you'd expect) the Tiger at each further-back position had to draw LOS further out into the field before they could see the ground over the rise they were hull-down behind. Also, if you turn one of the tanks a little to the side, your chance to hit it improves, because you can see more surface area. My estimate on the hull-down "window" is about a 2 meter strip that you have to stop your tank on, but this was probably unique to the slope of the hill i was using. Conclusions: It IS (arguably) difficult to stop your tank in hull down- if by difficult you mean within the 2m window. There is, however, no reason to worry about how much of your turret/upper hull is exposed: If you're hull-down, youre hull down! I think due to the difficulty of getting Hull-down, there is a need for some system with which to make this as easy for the player as it would be for a tanker IRL. Willmontgomery's idea (does it have a name?) would serve well in this role. (I had some cool screneshots of this test, then realised it was a little more difficult than I thought to post them here!) Homba [This message has been edited by Homba (edited 04-04-2001).] [This message has been edited by Homba (edited 04-04-2001).]
  13. On second thought the whole slow-down issue is just smoke- i think the Halt command will stop you dead in the middle of a fast move, so it is a non-issue. (I think this is true...) Your example of abusing seeing what the enemy can see was good. You've won me over- your way is more playable as you explained. It may not be *quite* as easy to get a hull-down stop as with my method, but still better than what we've got now, and would eliminate a good bit of catastrophic tank driving. Homba
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