Posted: 2008-03-05 05:38am
I just hope Abrigor makes it. Come on, his knowledge will be crucial for making Hell more militaristically formidable.
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That is if Satan doesn't kill him for his failure.Shroom Man 777 wrote:I just hope Abrigor makes it. Come on, his knowledge will be crucial for making Hell more militaristically formidable.
I would like to see that.Just imagine the look on his face.I kinda want to see him captured, then shown a nice presentation of how fucked he was from the very beginning. Video emerging from the hellmouth, video of him escaping the MLRS barrage, etc...
Portals can only be opened to the location of individuals the psychic has already mentally connected with. There probably aren't any humans to connect with in Satan's palace. Of course once Broomstick gets the resistance going there's no reason why the humans can't start lobbing random mortar shells at Dis.DarthShady wrote:Also i was wondering, now that we have the ability to open portals is it possible to assassinate Satan?
Regardless of whether Abigor makes it we will see some signs of the demons getting a clue and doing what they can to modernise their force structure and intelligence gathering. The demons aren't stupid, as we've seen with Abigor they are in fact highly intelligent, it's just that have very little practice at applying that intelligence in a systematic way (except in constructing convoluted multi-millenial plots to bring down rival demons). It's true that the humans have a huge head start and are used to operating on much shorter timescales, but (my guess is) when you're starting from virtually nothing even modest improvements in doctrine and equipment can make a very noticeable difference in effectiveness.Shroom Man 777 wrote:Come on, his knowledge will be crucial for making Hell more militaristically formidable.
How does one kill themselves in Hell? Apparently their recuperative powers are such that they can withstand chronic near-drowning, and the sharpest implements available to humans are the spikes of questionable pointiness they're nailed to the racks with. To kill yourself, you'd have to find someone to brutally murder you through repeated stabbing (or piss off a demon enough that they kill and eat you, instead of returning you to the racks.) When you consider that, if you can get away from the racks, then it suddenly becomes much more appealing to spend the next 10,000 years getting lost in the shuffle. Hell's apparently a very big place, and the jailers are very complacent.Brain_Caster wrote:How so? As of right now we don't even now what keeps people running in hell after they died on Earth. If they can form a body from nothing after their old one get's destroyed once, who says they can't do it again? For all we know, whenever you die in hell you might simply reform somewhere else in hell.The Duchess of Zeon wrote: But it is also extremely likely that if you die in Hell, even if you haven't died before, you are dead for good.
And if that isn't the case and any hell-deaths are permanent, wouldn't that mean that you can get out of "eternal" torture simply by killing yourself? If so, I'd expect a whole lot of people to have taken that option.
The energy required to create the new body in hell is a function of a very common calculation, and is the equivalent to the energy liberated from when that body's mass is annihilated in a matter/anti-matter detonation. THAT is the only place that the new body can come from--massive amounts of energy, which are presumably generated by the process through which the soul translates from one dimension to the next--if they are not outright inherent in the soul and the energy is even greater than that, with some bleeding off during transition.Brain_Caster wrote:How so? As of right now we don't even now what keeps people running in hell after they died on Earth. If they can form a body from nothing after their old one get's destroyed once, who says they can't do it again? For all we know, whenever you die in hell you might simply reform somewhere else in hell.The Duchess of Zeon wrote: But it is also extremely likely that if you die in Hell, even if you haven't died before, you are dead for good.
And if that isn't the case and any hell-deaths are permanent, wouldn't that mean that you can get out of "eternal" torture simply by killing yourself? If so, I'd expect a whole lot of people to have taken that option.
So why is the British built L111A1 is a Browning not a Vickers? I don't know the Vickers but I do know the Browning. There's nothing wrong with it. The Vickers may be marginally better, but practically it simply doesn't matter.JCady wrote:
The British did a side-by-side comparison of the .50-cal Browning and the .50-cal Vickers and found the Vickers superior, primarily in reliability.
Because they were comparing the Vickers to the water cooled version of the Browning. The L111A1 is the air cooled version and occupies a different tactical niche; the tactical niche of the water-cooled MG is not very relevant on the modern battlefield, but comes back in spades in The War On Damnation.R011 wrote:So why is the British built L111A1 is a Browning not a Vickers? I don't know the Vickers but I do know the Browning. There's nothing wrong with it. The Vickers may be marginally better, but practically it simply doesn't matter.JCady wrote:
The British did a side-by-side comparison of the .50-cal Browning and the .50-cal Vickers and found the Vickers superior, primarily in reliability.
That's the crux of the matter, isn't it? Is it the process of dieing and going to hell that creates the energy, or is the soul itself some kind of metaphysical power plant able to provide that energy?The Duchess of Zeon wrote:THAT is the only place that the new body can come from--massive amounts of energy, which are presumably generated by the process through which the soul translates from one dimension to the next--if they are not outright inherent in the soul and the energy is even greater than that, with some bleeding off during transition.
It would only be an educated guess, but I think that the Vickers went out of production quite some time before the Browning. So when the army decided that it needed an HMG after all, then it would make more sense to adopt the Browning, which brought the benefit of commonality with other NATO armies.R011 wrote:So why is the British built L111A1 is a Browning not a Vickers? I don't know the Vickers but I do know the Browning. There's nothing wrong with it. The Vickers may be marginally better, but practically it simply doesn't matter.JCady wrote:
The British did a side-by-side comparison of the .50-cal Browning and the .50-cal Vickers and found the Vickers superior, primarily in reliability.
But if the Vickers is so superior to the Browning then surely it shouldn't have been hard to make an air-cooled heavy barrel version in .50 BMG?JCady wrote: Because they were comparing the Vickers to the water cooled version of the Browning. The L111A1 is the air cooled version and occupies a different tactical niche; the tactical niche of the water-cooled MG is not very relevant on the modern battlefield, but comes back in spades in The War On Damnation.
Bingo!JN1 wrote:
It would only be an educated guess, but I think that the Vickers went out of production quite some time before the Browning. So when the army decided that it needed an HMG after all, then it would make more sense to adopt the Browning, which brought the benefit of commonality with other NATO armies.
The Vickers gun fired a 12.7x81mm cartridge which was one of the weakest heavy machine gun cartridges to ever enter service. Because it was low powered and yet very much heavier then a 7.62mm gun it was never used very widely. Once the RN ditched it for 20mm weapons and the British Army stopped using tanks armed purely with machine guns, it was effectively dead. It was never officially used as far as I'm aware, as a multipurpose ground gun arming things like trucks and infantry weapons platoons as was done with the M2JN1 wrote: It would only be an educated guess, but I think that the Vickers went out of production quite some time before the Browning. So when the army decided that it needed an HMG after all, then it would make more sense to adopt the Browning, which brought the benefit of commonality with other NATO armies.
It was never officially used as far as I'm aware, as a multipurpose ground gun arming things like trucks and infantry weapons platoons as was done with the M2
Just had a look at that on a couple of websites and it is a pretty impressive gun. It would certainly make a good baldrick killer.If we want to resurrect a dead machine gun, then the FN BRG-15 firing 15.5x106mm would be far more logical then a Vickers.
Given Stuarts earlier comments, it appears that very light armour will be highly effective against Baldricks. Would this be a suitable weapon to fit on lightly armoured vehicles? It's probably way too big for general infantry use...Sea Skimmer wrote:If we want to resurrect a dead machine gun, then the FN BRG-15 firing 15.5x106mm would be far more logical then a Vickers. That thing is just monstrous, with twice the muzzle energy of a .50cal Browning and better firepower then even the 14.5mm KPV. In firing trials the ball ammo was able to pierce the side of a BMP-1, an 18mm thick steel plate. IIRC at close range it could actually pierce both sides. The gun had double belt feeds and besides ball, AP, APDS and explosive shell ammo was developed for it. FN stopped short of production only because the Cold War ended and they decided to scale back R&D and divert funding towards another outdated relic, but one more likely to sell, the P90 submachine gun. Adding a water cooling jacket would be no trouble at all, and FN could get it into production long before anyone could strip down a museum piece Vickers gun and draw up plans for it.
Very good point. If nothing else, hauling half of them out there to substitute 3 SEALS* gives you a number of experiments:Brovane wrote:Really with the pilots in Hell I would think the number one priority would be getting some SF teams into Hell so they can be briefed by the pilots and then getting the pilots out of there. Pilots are not trained in covert operations like Green Berets our SEALS are.
That's an association fallacy. This is basically what you're saying is: Abigor is a Baldrick General. Abigor is intelligent. Therefore Baldrick Generals are intelligent. This does not compute.Starglider wrote:Regardless of whether Abigor makes it we will see some signs of the demons getting a clue and doing what they can to modernise their force structure and intelligence gathering. The demons aren't stupid, as we've seen with Abigor they are in fact highly intelligent, it's just that have very little practice at applying that intelligence in a systematic way (except in constructing convoluted multi-millenial plots to bring down rival demons).
The M14 DMR is an rather expensive tricked-out M-14 designed for squad marksman use, while the Sage Enhanced Battle Rifle is simply an M-14 action remounted in a fancy new receiver. It makes no sense to issue a precision DMR as a battle rifle, and the EBR is much more expensive than a standard M-14 while offering no real benefits save the provision of an integrated RIS, which is downright counterproductive in a time when we desperately need to crank out the maximum number of rifles possible.General Schatten wrote:Also, can someone explain to me why we can't just make a new .458 Battlerifle? It would seem to me that whilst rechambering M1's and M14's is a more permanent quick-fix than the Beowulf rounds, it still seems like there's a better choice out there. Going along with this, instead of just rechambering all those M1's and M14's, why don't we just modify the EBR and DMR lines for making .458 versions of those rifles, after all the M14 is a direct descendant from the M1 and the EBR and DMR are newer versions of the M14.
General Schatten wrote:
Also, can someone explain to me why we can't just make a new .458 Battlerifle? It would seem to me that whilst rechambering M1's and M14's is a more permanent quick-fix than the Beowulf rounds, it still seems like there's a better choice out there. Going along with this, instead of just rechambering all those M1's and M14's, why don't we just modify the EBR and DMR lines for making .458 versions of those rifles, after all the M14 is a direct descendant from the M1 and the EBR and DMR are newer versions of the M14.
What on earth makes you think we can adapt a Garand to magazine loading and a whole different cartridge any faster then we can stamp out AR-15s, which we already have factories building in multiple countries? Rugged reliability is less important then numbers, NOW, and frankly AR-15 reliability is more then good enough against an enemy with such limited ranged weaponry. Seriously now, a dozen new factories could download AR-15 plans off the internet and start building the things while gunsmiths at Aberdeen are still arguing over what kind of feed lip to use.The Duchess of Zeon wrote:
Because we need something enormously simple and rugged and reliable, and that is the Garand, which can be easily mass produced by the tens of millions. Modern rifles which have components made out of things other than wood and steel simply aren't going to cut it.