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Nidan1

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Posts posted by Nidan1

  1. The topic becomes complicated with the international moratorium on anti-personnel mines which the US didn't sign but is largely abiding by - with The Korean DMZ border being the one notable exception. I just looked in the game to make sure - Yup, US doesn't come with anti-personnel mines at all in the editor. Ukraine does, though.

    Does the Claymore qualify as a mine in the strict sense of the true function of mines as devices which channel forces, or deny territory or act as permanent barriers around hard installations. Really they are more an infantry "weapons system", emplaced in key locations temporarily, and designed to be used again. Unlike true mines which are usually buried and become "a friend to no side" when they are left in place and are a hazard long after a particular conflict is over. I think the Land Mine Moratorium was only dealing with "dumb land mines" IMO the Claymore does not fit that definition.

     

    I understand the moral implications on the use of landmines throughout the world. As far as the game is concerned, I do agree that Claymores should be a part of the US Army weapon selection. Probably for the Russians and Ukrainians as well.

  2. Again sounds made by flying projectiles are more distinct when they are over your head. In Vietnam my experience with mortars was usually at fairly short range, especially during a night bombardment you could sometimes hear the shells leaving the tubes.

    Unless the bombs were landing really close by you couldn't hear them in flight only the sound of the impact.

     

    The favorite mortar of the NVA was the 82mm variety, pretty large, and when targeted really close to you they made a whooshing or whistling sound as they passed. It was always said that as long as you could hear them they weren't going to land right on top of you. When they landed, the explosion made a sound as if the air was being ripped apart, what was really loud was the sound of the fragments zipping through the air. VC and NVA usually had FOs directing fire during the day, so the mortar fire was often very accurate and scarey.

  3. Good question, most audible sonic booms are created by aircraft flying at altitude. A high velocity bullet will make a cracking sound overhead if it passes near someone. (not a pleasant sound). I would guess that the trajectory of a Khrizantema is fairly flat, and the range is within a mile, so for anyone on the ground when one passes by it would probably give off a small boom when in supersonic flight. Probably would not even break glass.

  4. Congrats sburke, I think...

     

    Last time anybody made it to knight in this place was when Emrys was a young lad chasing the damsels. And that was eons ago.

     

    Talking of damsels, where is Emrys. We know he survived his little accident, so what's his excuse to not show up here? The smell of Joe's armpits?

     

    Talk to us, Emrys!

    Emrys has never even been a Squire, let alone an exhalted Knight or even a  Knight of any kind exhaulted or otherwise. I'm surprised Shaw didnt make that point, but we all know his mental acumen has increasingly faded over the years. 

     

    If you ever expect to raise your status here young Panzer Mike, you had better study up on MBT history and lore.

  5. Ninja'ed by IanL, but indeed since windows vista (or even XP?) it is possible to manage volume per application in Windows (scale 0-100). Not sure about Mac, but it ought to have something similar too. My headset has an analog button for volume control, sometimes analog owns digital ;-)

    Sometimes? Analog is better than digital all the time, since digital is not a real sample of sound but an electronic representation of a sound with the higher and lower frequencies discarded. For someone with really fine tuned hearing, listening to digital music especially can be a disappointment.

  6. Post retracted- forgot we weren't in the MBT.  What a shame as it was gonna be an epic put down of stupendous proportions and would have resulted in you donning a doody hat.

    I think you are rather too enamored with doody, perhaps it was some slight during your childhood, or parental neglect.

     

    Slide on over there, I'll give you your shot.

  7. Afghanistan has not really been a country as we know one to be. My in depth knowledge of its history is limited. They have been a highway from Asia to Europe for centuries. Never really establishing a national identity. We should have beat feet after crushing the Taliban. We just love nation building.

     

    I'll try the book, thanks.

  8. If I'd been a Viet Cong the second I saw Napalm (or Puff the Magic Dragon for that matter) I would've defected and chu hoi-ed my pajama wearin' *** all the way to Idaho. Those dudes were some tough little scrappers with iron cojones.

     

     

    Mord.

    Sure they were tough, in their way of thinking,  the VC were fighting for the freedom of their country, North Vietnamese were fighting to reunite their country, artificially divided by meddling Westerners. They saw it as elephants versus grasshoppers. All the USA saw was Red.  We never seem to learn the lessons of popular uprisings, even though we fought one against the English. Since we are talking about Afghanistan, how long have the Mujahideen been fighting against various colonial powers? Yet they are still fighting.

  9. Edit..........................

    Something to seriously think about, right?

     

    Regards,

     

    John Kettler

    In what context John?

     

    The US was doing basically the same thing back in the 60s along the Ho Chi Minh Trail.

    Our game takes place in 2017, there are far more sophisticated mechanisms in place to establish fire missions on unobserved targets. Plus in today's world who is actually unobserved?

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