Which tells us the guard is big? Which we already knew? Ok, if this a representative layout of a guard battle group, it just says it contains all the elements needed to conduct an operation. It doesn't even give a solid breakdown of tanks vs. artillery pieces, which would have been at least somewhat informative. It doesn't say anything about the general mechanization level or even to what extent are they motorized. Artillery by default requires motorization, but that is not conclusive proof when it comes to infantry."I have at my command an entire battle group of the Imperial Guard. Fifty Regiments, including specialised drop troops, stealthers, mechanised formations, armoured companies and mobile artillery. Over half a million fighting men and thirty thousand tanks and artillery pieces are mine to command.
Page 8
Ok, the guard is really, really freakishly humongous. We already know Armageddon is a notable world when it comes to armored units and regiments raised on armageddon are very likely to contain high levels of armor and mech inf. It's still a single world and we don't know the total number of regiments that are raised throughout the imperium in a similar timeframe. 5th codex pretty much says this is not enough to achieve general mechanization in the guard.For a hive worl dsuch as Armageddon, caught in the throes of an all-consuming war, a draft of at least a hundred million men at arms and several million armoured vehicles is typical, a tiny fraction of the totla populace which numbers in the hundreds of billions.
Page 9
I don't know what you're getting at with this, but guard units are supposed to be moved by troop transports and if you increase the number of vehicles in a regiment, number of men decreases.The basic principle held by the Departmento Munitorum is that regardless of number of men at arms or the exact composition of armoured vehicles, the overall fighting strength - and hence combat effectiveness, of one regiment is equivalent to any other. This is clearly a gross over-simplification but a necessary one when organising wars on a galactic scale.
Tanks and other stuff take a lot of space not to mention fuel, spare parts, maintenance vehicles etc. that are needed to support them. It would be silly to assume regiments don't get deployed with at least a month worth of consumables, considering the fucked up nature of warp travel and supply on the spot can be unreliable.
Page 19
I'm out of words to describe big, oh one more Motherfucking Gargantuan huge.Armageddon has a massive population and is capable of raising a large number of Imperial Guard regiments. Indeed, at the height of the second War for Armageddon more regiments were being raised each year from the population of Armageddon than from any two other worlds in the entire Segmentum Solar combined.
Page 38
Yes, I think no one is denying this.The Chimera is the Imperial Guard's most commonly used armoured troop carrier. These ubiquitous vehicles are extremely durable and practical...
Page 38
Already touched upon earlier, but what the hell. This gives a regiment a modest amount of tactical mobility, but overall it's still stuck to infantry speeds. Against a fully mechanized force of similar size it's not that useful since the whole of the opposing force can more easily choose where to fight and overall has greater tempo of battle.An infantry regiment does not typically include any mechanised troops, it being difficult for most planetary governors to obtain and maintain the vehicles needed for such formations. BEcause of this, it is quite common for commanders to attach individual Armoured Fist squads from fully mechanised regiments in order to provide fast-moving armoured transport.
Page 51
Triple A covering you is a good thing??Manufactured on hundreds of Forge worlds, the Hydra is a common sight in the Imperial Guard, freuqently deployed in support of armoued tank columsn, fixed emplacements and infantry regiments who would otherwise be a threat from enemy bomber strikes and strafing runs.
Often, as in not always and still leaves most of the infantry on foot. Having commanding officers in a command vehicle means he can change vantage point more quickly and take personal command if needed in a critical spot. They also carry voxes to stay in communication with each other and their support elements. This is was a new idea back in WWII.Ah, but I can do more than just post from the 5th edition Codex, I can post from other (non novel) sources as well. Such as:
Previous IG codex
Page 11
An infantry regiment is often supplied with a number of Chimera transports. They allow a commander the option of mounting a number of squads to provide Armoured Fist units for greater tactical flexibility. In addition, they are used to transport command squads which can make good use of the long-range vox casters they carry. Some regiments are entirely mounted in Chimeras but this is relatively rare.
IA
PAge 11
Having something in huge numbers doesn't mean everyone gets to have some, or that they get any at all. Specially when talking about the guard.As sole guardians of technology, the Adeptus Mechanicus have no difficulty in regulating what vehicles ar made for whom. Whilst Leman Russ and Chimeras are manufactured in huge numbers for the Imperial Guard, the largest vehicle entrusted to Imperial Guard commanders (whose loyalty has sometimes proved questionable) are the superheavy tanks and the Leviathan command vehicle.
Page 143
If anyone, anywhere thought IG can survive without supply vehicles, is a good contender for the dumbass of the year award. I really don't know why you brought this point up Connor, I'm sure you had a reason. But I really wonder what is was / is.
The Trojan is the workhorse used by Imperial Guard armoured regiments as a tractor for towing weapons platforms and as an armoured munitions carrier, ferrying extra ammunition to the platforms once in position or to frontline units in need of supplying.
The Trojan is not a combat vehicle and rarely sees service at the frongline. Behind the lines it is a common sight, trundling to and from supply dumps to forwar dunits. Using the basic Chimera chassis and engine, it is quick to manufacture and efficient in its role, with good road and cross-country performance.
Page 143
Better make that: IG is utterly fucked without a supply vehicle.Although it is not meant to be committed to battle there have been many examples of Trojans being converted in field workshops for use in combat. As an (all be it weakly) armoured vehicle, it can be pressed into forntline service by desperate commanders. Some examples of such expedient field conversions are: Adding autocannons to create a makehsift anti-aircraft weapon, bolting on extra armour plates to crete a small personnel carrier, packing the rear with communications equipment to create a headquarters comm hub, and creating ad-hoc engineering vehicles by adding minesweepers or even a light bridge layer. These vheicles are never as successful as their authentic counteparts, but most commanders would rather explain themselves to an irate Adeptus Mechanicus Enginseer than be seen to fail in the eyes of their superiors or Commissar.
Maybe if the original poster of the thread had stated what sort of forces are facing each other, this wouldn't have gone the route of broad speculative comparative analysis of two forces that can contain pretty much what the fuck ever. Not that IG threads are the only ones that suffer from "But if they field this piece of equipment they can totally kick ass".I could go on. I could point out specific examples from the IA books (they cover breakdowns and how mechanised formations are used in specific regiments, like the Cadian 114th or in armoured regiments/companies, etc.) I could cite earlier material even more, since its long established that GW, BL, or any author will never restrict him or herself to "current" stuff - they happily recycle older materia if it suits them (much of 5th edition is recycled material.) I could also make declarations based my quotes, or generalize about the structure of the Guard. But I won't, because it would be silly and would just degenerate into semantics nitpickery (Hell it's already heading that way.) .
The problem is, though, that posting a few exercpts doesn't prove much unless you're making a specific point (EG a calc, and even then you have some numbers.) We might make some ratios from a couple of the quotes I posed from the 5th edition codex, or from the previous codex edition (Cadian 8th's makeup) but that's not going to settle matters either. Using Hoth's quotes or any of the qualitative quotes I posted is not going to tell us anything (how the fuck do we attach numbers to words like "ubiquitous" or "rare"? In terms of even vague precision they're useless.)
To make this work would need more data, and more data from a greater variety of sources. Which isn't likely to happen, since this really isn't a debate. There's the aformentioned limited data set. Further, what little data we do have lacks any actual analysis. No verifiable comparisons or contrasts, no numbers, no examples, no citations or detailed explanations... see to actually do an analysis you have to do at least one, preferrably more of the above. Even more hilarious is how vague most of the data being posted (including myself) is and the myriad interpretations it offers. I mean, we haven't even broken down logistical issues at ALL, or the financial/economic side of things. We haven't touched on the structure or duties of the Guard (EG what are all those troops usually used for? Invasions and defending planets is one, but garrison and guard duty is another.) It doesn't deal with strategy or tactics much beyond "IG is slow hur hur" which as pointed out is simplistic in the extreme. I could go on and on listing qualifiers, and it still doesn't change that we're still dealing too many unknowns, and yet we have people trying to generalize about functioning of the guard Guard from a couple paragraphs (or rather, vague recollections of some stuff soem guy read.)
Oh and to top it all off, there's the whole "I don't give a fuck I'll debate this how I want" attitude, despite the reality of how debates are SUPPOSED to happen on the board (EG read the rules, especially the bits on burden of proof.) Hell, Simon already addressed this little problem and got brushed off.
So yeah, this thread has already become a trainwreck like alot of other IG oriented threads, but whether it can be salvaged is the question, which I honestly doubt.
-Gunhead