Beowulf wrote:C-141 class is still on the order of 70klbs. A medium bulldozer like a Caterpiller D7 is in the 30klbs class. Can't necessarily do the really big stuff, but could do a decent amount. Probably weigh a bit more after you add in CBR equipment though.
Yeah.
Basically, I was trying to think of some realistic limitations of the Umerian force structure, and "is not designed for airlifting heavy supplies" is one of the obvious ones. The latest model of the C-141-equivalent aircraft might be
theoretically capable of handling some pretty heavy vehicles, but it was not designed to carry the heavy vehicles actually used by my military, nor were the heavy vehicles used by my military designed for air transport.
Thanas wrote:C-141 class is still on the order of 70klbs. A medium bulldozer like a Caterpiller D7 is in the 30klbs class. Can't necessarily do the really big stuff, but could do a decent amount. Probably weigh a bit more after you add in CBR equipment though.
Who is using C-141s? Umeria?
That was in one of my more recent OOC thread posts: the Umerians are in fact using a C-141-
equivalent aircraft, something broadly comparable in configuration, range, payload, and so on. It is not exactly a C-141 Starlifter, but that's a good reference point for what the plane might be capable of. Then again, it might be a bit less capable. The point is, it's a functional cargo plane, but an old, lightweight design from an era when nobody seriously considered the idea of, say, airlifting tanks around the world.
Simon_Jester wrote:And because you may have to fight enemy carrier groups and highly competent national navies all over the place, having an 'edge' over an enemy fleet in some key performance parameter of your ships is valuable. Such as, say, being able to keep sailing at top speed for several thousand kilometers without needing to refuel, while an enemy's ships have long since run out of diesel and had to stop and render themselves vulnerable with a rendezvous with a fleet oiler.
OTOH, if you have a much larger fleet than your opponent because he spends about 1/4 more per ship then you can take a bit of time or just station more escorts elsewhere.
While being outnumbered five to four is inconvenient it is far from decisive. Especially if you are able to use superior mobility and ability to engage in long independent cruises to isolate and destroy a small part of the enemy's fleet when it is far from reinforcement.
I think the real takeaway here is that this is an actual, viable choice. Not a case where
clearly option A is so much superior to option B that people who take A should always easily defeat people who take B.
Siege wrote:Simon_Jester wrote:In SDNW6, a peer competitor navy could cut you off from supplies unless you have lots and lots of your own oil, so having ships that can run for years without running out of gas is appealing.
As long as you have enough money you can just buy your supplies from San Dorado and there'd be nothing this peer competitor could do about it, unless they start torpedoing SANDEX ships, which would be a very bad idea for anyone that likes their wartime economy robust and functional.
In practice, that is normally going to be true, but if I'm doing procurement for a national military and I'm a
really paranoid bastard I can think of a lot of problems with putting all my eggs in that basket. Because I'm designing these ships to fight a purely hypothetical war that might take place ten, twenty, or even thirty years in the future. Who can know what that future might hold?
Maybe SANDEX will be offering to sell me oil, but at such a massive price hike that it cramps my military style to pay it. Maybe my country will have already pissed off SANDEX and I have that problem
in addition to being at war with a peer competitor. Maybe my enemy has decided they
can get away with pissing off SANDEX. Maybe SANDEX looks at the
risk of losing supertankers to any bozo with an antiship missile and an itchy trigger finger, and decides it's not worth it. Maybe my enemy has managed to bribe SANDEX to avoid my ports. Maybe they've struck some kind of deal with SANDEX in the runup to the war. Maybe some disaster will have befallen SANDEX, or San Dorado in general, and they will no longer be the magnificent international scofflaws we know and love to loathe today.
In all these cases, it's at least desirable for my warships to still be able to do their jobs.
People have been worried about ensuring a secure supply of oil for their fleets for literally as long as there have been oil-powered warships. About the only countries that felt secure enough to do this
without having constant public arguments were the ones that already had major oil reserves on their home soil (like the US in the 1910s). Even countries that legally owned plenty of oil
elsewhere (like Britain in 1910) were a bit reluctant to switch from coal (which Britain has lots of on its land) to oil (which it doesn't).