Titan Uranus wrote:I explained why further down, but I'll respond up here. I don't know what they were intending to do in the channel, I just have problems with the explanation that they were there to engage the channel fleet.
Perhaps they were there to observe the ships with an eye toward duplicating them, modifying them into designs useful to the martians, or assessing their capabilities, using three tripods to get a view from multiple angles and so that they were close enough to get a good view of the ships (as well as for protection). That's actually a decent reason for not firing on the Thunderchild until she got close.
"Yeah command, they're just comin' right at us, we're getting some really good video here."
"Uhh, command, the water machine ain't stopping... requesting permission to fire"
*Tripods fire, but fail to melt the armor in time*
*enraged screams, then crazed screams, then static*
Okay, that actually makes a fair amount of sense.
I'm not sure that the Channel Fleet can actually do that, the walkers are presumably 100 ft tall, from the book (though that could be inaccurate considering the sources). The heat ray is mounted below the cockpit, so let's say that the ray is 80 ft high, that gives an 11 mile view distance.
This depends heavily on the height of the tripods. If they are less than 100 feet tall, their range decreases significantly. Since we don't get a precise measurement, only information from newspaper articles that are themselves inaccurate even in-story, it's hard to say.
If they can find a 100 ft high hill to stand upon, then the view distance is 16.4 miles, the range of the Canopus-class battleship's main guns (the newest BB class at the time, as far as I can tell) is listed as 10,000 yards (5.6 miles) by the wiki. So if they were out there to engage the Channel Fleet then their effective range must be less than line of sight and less than ~5.6 miles. It's possible of course that the maximum range was much longer than the effective range, but I doubt it was twice as long.
Given the lay of the coastline in the area in question, it is very possible that the Martians
can't find hills that high to stand on. Not if the shoreline doesn't permit it, or if the hills of that height are all too far from the sea for it to be beneficial.
Also, the atmosphere may cause attenuation of the heat ray at ranges considerably less than five to ten miles. In real life the US Navy is having considerable trouble implementing laser weaponry, precisely because when laser weapons are fired through sea air, the high humidity and spray tends to attenuate the beam. Since all evidence suggests that the heat ray is a laser-like weapon, it may be stopped by the moist air, or they may be scattered to the point where they are unlikely to cut through the armored side of a warship in a reasonable amount of time.
Yet another possibility is that the Martians sent out three tripods to
assess the depth of the water, which they could not realistically know, in order to figure out whether or not engaging the fleet would be practical. Which ties into you saying...
Since wading out to engage the fleet implies a shorter range than the fleet, I think it is more likely (if we assume a shorter range) that they Tripods were there to observe the ships as they left the Thames. That way they could get an idea of whether or not they could close with the Channel Fleet despite the tripod's slower speed in water. What do you think?
This is credible. I think we are in or near agreement.
I still think it believable that the Martians who waded out into the Channel were moving to engage the Channel Fleet or at least seek a practical firing position from which to do so. However, it is also plausible that they were simply observing the shipping itself and were therefore caught by surprise when one of the ships suddenly attacked them with deadly force.
The key point is that the author's supposition that they were there to slaughter the civilian shipping is not believable. If they were able to do so, they would have already started by firing heat-rays from long range... unless of course the heat-ray is much shorter-ranged than we have been led to believe, even shorter than
I believe.
But an airship moves slowly through the air (about as fast as a tripod can walk). And it would have a huge vulnerable gas-bag and would be very easily shot down by even the crudest of artillery. Moreover, Earth has highly energetic weather, probably more energetic than Mars, and an airship would be vulnerable to destruction in storms, which the Martians would know are possible without having any experience in how to deal with them.
If you have telescopes that can provide significant intelligence, then you probably have good enough optics that you can park the airship which really doesn't need to be that big) at 20000ft, or however high or low you want, 1800's artillery cannot reach very high even if they have mounts which can aim that high. But that again gets into the question of how much they actually knew about the Earth. As far as I can figure, they know that the Earthlings have electricity, but not radio.
I'm sure the Martians could have designed a high altitude lighter-than-air craft that would be able to function on Earth.
The point is that while they
could do so, the benefits of them sending such ships along in their cylinders are doubtful. We have indications that each cylinder is only large enough to contain five fighting machines. If so, then sending along even one airship might significantly decrease their overall fighting machine force. And it is unlikely that the aerial reconnaissance thus provided,
for the few days before they get their first flying machine ready, would make a significant difference.
This is important. Within mere days of their landing,
Martian flying machines are already in the air. There is no evidence that they could have done much better than this by any reasonable means. There is no evidence that they could have somehow benefited greatly from bringing flying machines of a different type, or having them ready significantly before they did.
As far as I am concerned, this entire notion of Martians somehow having "weak" reconnaissance and having erred in not bringing more or different flying machines is a random brainbug that makes very little sense.
In the WotW universe, I'm fairly sure that Mars used to be a green planet, though I suppose that would be very difficult for the Narrator to actually know. Also, it's habitable by creatures that can inhabit Earth, so presumably the atmosphere can't be too much different unless it has a hell of a lot of oxygen, enough that I am almost certain that they would't develop heat rays into their most viable weapon. Though perhaps they would, and just deal with the resulting conflagration, that seems counterproductive on a dying planet but it wouldn't be outside the realm of possibility, especially if they were not used by collective agreement, like tactical nukes.
In any case, I bet the Martian atmosphere has storms in the WotW universe.
Since Mars is canonically much colder and dryer, and receives less energy from the Sun, while it no doubt
has storms, it is likely that these storms are less energetic than on Earth. On Earth, some of the main drivers of storm dynamics are:
1) Massive bodies of warm seawater (this is the main reason for hurricanes, for instance)
2) The difference in albedo between seawater and land causing difference in temperature.
3) Moisture in the air interacting with other variations of temperature and pressure.
4) Oceans acting as large, mostly flat areas where storm systems can build up energy without losing much of it to friction with terrain features.
None of this is in play on Mars.
On a cold desert planet, storms would still happen, and dust storms could be quite dangerous. But they would tend to be rarer and weaker than on Earth, all else being equal.
Moreover, my POINT here is that Martian scientists would know Earth has clouds (which you literally cannot miss if you're looking at the Earth) and probably storms. But they would not know much about the real atmospheric conditions, and would not have experience dealing with Earthly storms that are rich in rain and hail and lightning (they might well know about lightning since lightning creates radio signature).
So they may well just plain
not know if it would be safe to operate flying machines on Earth without going there and trying it for themselves.
If the Martians weren't being arrogant about unknown environmental hazards on Earth, and weren't blind to the possibility of the British having the ability to fight back meaningfully... They would not seriously consider bringing a lighter-than-air airship to use on Earth. Not when such an airship would have a great deal of bulk that could be committed to fighting machines or to sending more Martians in the cylinders.
Why? I know that I said airship, and that gives the image of a gigantic contraption, but all that is really needed is a vehicle the size of a hot air balloon with an engine of some type, which given their ignorance of the wheel would presumably have to be a jet or rocket engine, probably jet.
The practical minimum size for a rigid airship capable of acting as a
useful observation craft is still significant. They might be able to build an extremely tiny tethered balloon or something and fit it into a corner of one of their cylinders, but this would again be of very, very doubtful and limited value.
In fact, as far as I can determine this hypothetical Martian blimp/airship/whatever is still a solution in search of a problem.
Though it's possible that they do have the wheel, and only their fighting machines lack it, the flying machine was incomplete and if anything was going to be declared a state secret after the war it would be that, so the Narrator might not have gotten a chance to examine it.
Wait a second, the cylinder unscrewed, right? That means lathes, and lathes mean wheels, unless they used some other means to create the lid. How on earth do you create a cylinder as a technical society without creating wheels?
We are told in detail that the Martian technology on Earth makes little use of "fixed pivots" as well as wheels. The question of how they create a cylindrical spacecraft without wheels is uncertain- but we DO know they have a variety of means of creating fixed sliding joints that duplicate many of the functions of wheels. I wouldn't get too hung up on it.
Yeah, but it would have been discovered in the Cylinders after the war. It is unthinkable that they wouldn't bring any, unless they had way more knowledge about Earth than we had assumed. The point is that either the Narrator was incomplete in his information (odd, since it would fit with the narrative both he and Wells were selling "if only they's kept their breathing apparatus on we would have been doomed", I wouldn't agree with that assessment but it seems like something he would say) or the Martians had way more knowledge about Earth/were way more reckless than I would assume.
That's a fair point, and it suggests that the Martians did in fact know that Earth's atmosphere would be breathable to them.
That said, my original point wasn't that the Martians couldn't be sure our atmosphere was
breathable. It's that they couldn't be sure there wasn't some quirk of our atmosphere that would impair their ability to operate flying machines.
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Their reconnaissance was totally adequate to their needs, Uranus.
Their enemies' reconnaissance was literally horse cavalry. Whereas their reconnaissance could be performed by armored fighting vehicles too powerful for the enemy to even threaten except from fixed defenses, moving at the same speeds we would use for land-based reconnaissance in real life, and able to see the surrounding terrain for several miles in all directions because of their great height.
Yes, but they had no reason to think that until after they started engaging the British Army, they could not have possibly known that the British did not have tank-equivalents until they engaged them, not to mention that an airship would have allowed the Martians to see over obstacles while allowing their commander to get a good look at all of their forces and better coordinate them. I have no real idea how well forested South East England was in 1898 or how hilly it is, but I bet there are enough obstacles to make it difficult to command dozens of machines over miles of terrain.
Not very forested or hilly at all, really. The English countryside was dominated by farms and low-lying second growth forest, with little or no 'untamed wilderness.'
It's uncertain if the Martians had radios (we know they used a sound-based system to communicate, and there's no obvious reason why they should bother with one if they have radios, but there may be a reason that is NOT obvious to us). But again, the Martians seemed to have no difficulty coordinating their forces well enough to meet their needs in the novel.
The Martians could reasonably have been worried that the British would have some kind of primitive tanks or antitank guns of their own, yes- but if they had such military hardware it is
also very much possible that they would have at least primitive fighter aircraft capable of shooting down a blimp. The problem cuts both ways; if a Martian tripod is inadequate to defeat the British on the ground, a small blimp isn't going to do a lot of good in fighting them in the air.
Exactly how do you think the Martians were in any way threatened or inconvenienced by their 'deficient' recon capabilities?
In the actual event, not at all, but since their only information is from presumably Mars-based telescopes and all they would tell you is that the Earth is somewhere between electricity and the radio in technological advancement, and you are dropping into an industrialized area with unknown numbers of unknown hostiles wielding unknown weapons, I would sure as fuck want to look around before going into a decisive action.
They're committed to decisive action as soon as they land- it's not like they can
leave if anything goes wrong. Their options are either to conquer, or to surrender. And if the locals turn out to be too tough to conquer, then Mars can't colonize Earth, and it matters very little whether the lead wave of the Martian expedition lives or dies. Because either way, the expedition cannot go home, and Martian civilization is doomed unless the Venus colonization project works out.
So anything that reduces the likelihood of successful conquest (like, say, sacrificing 10 or 20% of their overall tripod force in exchange for a few blimps that may not even be safe to use in the local atmosphere)... That is a bad idea.
Surely their information must come from Mars-based telescopes (I bet Olympus Mons has a hell of a good view)? Is it even physically possible to shoot a satellite out of a gun and have it achieve orbit around another world without rockets to change trajectory? And if you have rockets, why on earth would you use a gun for interplanetary expeditions?
If the Martian atmosphere is low enough in density, and if they can get the muzzle high enough into the atmosphere, a gun might well be more efficient. There's a reason people are suggesting mass drivers for payload launch in real life (especially as a way to launch from the Moon and Mars).
They might well be able to build small rockets to decelerate a spacecraft, but find a gun preferable for launching large payloads.
For that matter, if the capsules are purely ballistic then the whole trip is arguably suicide, because they have no ability to make mid-course corrections. Firing a gun accurately enough to hit a specific target on Earth is theoretically possible, but even the tiniest error could result in the cylinder crashing into the ocean or missing the planet altogether. It makes much more sense to imagine that they have rockets with enough delta-V to at least ensure that the Martian cylinders land in the right place, in which case braking an observation satellite into a stable Earth orbit is also viable.
Why would this be preferable to, or for that matter different from, what the Martians actually did? They deployed their fighting machines, they drove away the native population for miles around the area they initially landed in, and then they started operations to construct flying machines that, among other things, appear to have performed reconnaissance.
It isn't, only that the Martians did not wait for their flying machines to be ready before launching a serious offensive. As it was they had no way of knowing what the British had beyond their immediate area, they could have been fighting militia or police for all they knew. Again, I'm not arguing that attacking makes them stupid, just arrogant in a completely understandable way.
To secure an area of the size you envision (tens of miles across) would have
required a "serious offensive." Moreover, as noted, this is a do-or-die operation for the Martians. They cannot go home, their only choices are surrender or conquest. They can't actually
do anything different if the British turn out to have much stronger army units in reserve ready to attack them after a few days. Their only hope is to spread out across Britain as widely as possible, cause as much disruption and mass panic and turn the population into refugees, so that mounting an organized counterattack is impossible.
Staying bottled up in a small beachhead for a few days while waiting for reconnaissance reports does NOT make it less likely that the British government will be able to organize a successful counterattack. If anything it makes it more likely.
Exactly how is what they actually did a flawed or unwise plan? "Being cautious" is not the same as "being smart." Indeed, you would expect a super-intelligent person to know precisely what degree of caution is actually warranted by a situation, and to make reasonable allowances for that, but then to NOT waste time and resources guarding against dangers that are unlikely to materialize.
Sure, but I was assuming that all they know is that humans are industrialized, have electricity, and do not have radio. That is not enough to make predictions when 1918 Britain would have given them a really hard time.
1918 Britain would have been more dangerous to the Martians not so much because of their better technology, but because of their higher level of military mobilization. Even with limited information, the Martians may well have been able to deduce that Britain was NOT a heavily mobilized society with large armies 'ready to go' on short notice.
Indeed, that would actually have been a good reason to target Britain in the first place. All the continental European powers of this time had conscript armies, most of them equipped with larger and more modern arsenals of artillery. They would have been able to dispatch more troops more quickly and efficiently to react to Martian attack. Britain had much weaker land defenses, precisely because it was used to relying on its navy to protect it from invasion.
Reconnaissance is routinely performed by single individuals flying airplanes, or driving vehicles, or riding a horse, or walking around on foot. That is not at all unusual, and in the history of warfare scouts have operated alone many, many times.
Yes, but the optimal configuration for a fighting vehicle and the optimal configuration for a scouting vehicle are not the same.
So what? When you are limited to ten cylinders each containing five vehicles, and you have an island with a population of tens of millions and a land area of tens of thousands of square miles to conquer,
it does not matter. If you can send fifty effective combat machines, and those machines are at least
adequate reconnaissance vehicles, then you do not waste time fooling around and creating reconnaissance vehicles that cannot perform as well in a fight. You send in the fifty machines, because it is hard enough conquering an island of tens of millions with so few vehicles
WITHOUT screwing around and wasting space, resources, and energy.
They could make reasonable estimates or projections, at least, if they know roughly how large humans are physically and what size weapons humans can carry, and given that they know roughly the level of technology Victorian civilization would have.
But how would they know how large humans are, you can't tell that from Mars, or even orbit, right?
With very good telescopes they can see our buildings, or potentially even our wagons and other vehicles, and get a pretty good idea of how large we are. Their ideas might turn out to be wrong, but it wouldn't be very likely.
Yes, but they wouldn't know how powerful Victorian cannon were. How can you possibly tell the muzzle velocity of a cannon from Mars or orbit? A cannon of the same type, optimized for HE (which probably would have happened had there been a major European war in the 1890's) might well have had no difficulty penetrating. If engine technology were a little better during that hypothetical war, you might well have wound up with AT rifles, which might have penetrated just fine.
That's a plausible risk, but armoring the machines well enough to be immune to direct hits from 3" exploding shells, or .50 caliber rifles may have been impractical given the constraints of being able to launch them through interplanetary space.
If it turned out that the natives were actually capable of defeating a force of fifty tripods that moved quickly to dismantle their communications and transport networks,
too bad. If they can do that, then the whole invasion is very likely to be pointless, and they're screwed and doomed anyway.
So they do the best they could with the considerable resources at their disposal, construct a good plan to make the best of what they have, and then
go, launching their attack as quickly as possible before humans grow any more advanced and capable of repelling the invasion. Delay does not benefit them here, since as you keep pointing out it would not have taken much more technological development or social change to make humans capable of defeating Martian armies.
The relatively light armament of the Thunderchild would make identification harder, though depending on what the front looked like, that might not speak too well of their optics.
They may also have had optics trouble caused by dealing with wave action buffeting their tripods, as well as sea spray. Those are environmental conditions they would have no experience with.
But I don't see why they can't build up in the Yukon/Upper Canada/insert remote area reasonably close to industry and start their blitzkrieg a few months later when their follow-on forces land in the NW US or the Rhineland. However, the possibility does exist that they needed something industrial immediately, like fuel. They would presumably know that there is fossil fuel usage. If they did need fuel, then hitting Britain first makes good sense, though I'm not sure how they planned to extract/synthesize/whatever enough of it with their initial landing force.
None of the areas you name are particularly close to large industrial centers. The American northwest was not a large industrial center in the 1890s, and what industry there was had been built too recently to have played a role in long range Martian planning. The Rhineland is the heart of Europe's industrial areas, so why are you even mentioning it?
It seems far more likely that the Martians were planning to make use of immediately available resources; it may well have been that they brought industrial machinery for those purposes in their cylinders. We know the Martians had machines of types other than the pure 'fighting machines,' including the "crab-like handling machine," and we never do find a full, exhaustive list of the types of equipment they have available to them.
The Martians have canals, and presumably at one point liquid seas, like our Mars. Unless they don't have canal boats for some reason, I think they would see water as an aid to movement.
Even if they have experience using artificial canals for boats, that's not the same as being able to comprehend the tremendous advantages of flexibility and mobility that sea power confers.
Also, Martian canals would have been used for moving water for consumption and irrigation, not for transportation (unless of course they like having people boat in their drinking water).
In the recent history of their civilization, and thus in the history that informs the mindset of their planners, a gigantic body of water would not seem like an obvious path for enemy forces to move along. It would seem like a barrier.
We know this because this psychology influenced (for example) historical planners of wars in France and Germany, who had far greater knowledge of sailing, ships, and sea power than any Martian,
even a Martian who had observed earth extensively.
It didn't matter in the book, because the humans were so clearly outmatched and divided. For all they knew, Europe was a united empire with a 1918 army that would have swarmed across the channel by the millions as soon as the Martians landed.
If that were so then they were doomed anyway and nothing they could do would help. Invading with ten or a hundred times as much force would then have been necessary- but an invasion in such huge force would in turn have taken decades longer to prepare, during which time Martian climate would have gotten worse and human power to resist would have increased, causing a further vicious cycle and making Martian victory nearly impossible.
Striking quickly with a strong but limited force may well have been their best strategy... but in that case all their choices about how to equip that force would be driven by the need to maximize its chances of success against a vastly more numerous force.