Edited by Xaxius Colnier, 27 June 2012 - 04:00 AM.


Wouldn't a Atlas mech weigh more than 100 tons?
#261
Posted 27 June 2012 - 03:58 AM
#262
Posted 27 June 2012 - 04:02 AM
I've personally been involved in one TPz Fuchs (you might know it as the M93 Fox, the US military's derivative) getting stuck twice in one day in grassland. It weighs less than 17 tons, the second time we had to wait for a day to get the winch - the hull had sucked itself stuck due to contact with the ground.
#263
Posted 27 June 2012 - 04:03 AM
Xaxius Colnier, on 27 June 2012 - 03:58 AM, said:
If they can damage a mech they'd either need to be bigger than 20mm, or they'd be ultra high velocity and would weigh more from having a larger explosive.
#264
Posted 27 June 2012 - 04:04 AM
Look at it this way: In BT a round takes 10 seconds. A MG wouldn't be a MG if it fired only once in 10 seconds, would it? If you fire continuously, all the bullets fired within 10 seconds amount to 1 shot of those 200, and in 10 seconds you can fire A LOT of bullets, even at today's standards.
#265
Posted 27 June 2012 - 04:20 AM
RedDragon, on 27 June 2012 - 04:04 AM, said:
Look at it this way: In BT a round takes 10 seconds. A MG wouldn't be a MG if it fired only once in 10 seconds, would it? If you fire continuously, all the bullets fired within 10 seconds amount to 1 shot of those 200, and in 10 seconds you can fire A LOT of bullets, even at today's standards.
In present day English
Round = one unit of ammunition (projectile,shell,charge,primer), auf Deutsch Patrone
Edited by Romulus Stahl, 27 June 2012 - 04:23 AM.
#266
Posted 27 June 2012 - 04:22 AM
Phasics, on 27 June 2012 - 04:03 AM, said:
If they can damage a mech they'd either need to be bigger than 20mm, or they'd be ultra high velocity and would weigh more from having a larger explosive.
no they are 20mm according to sarna and i dont know if you were aware of what an A-10's Vulcan gun can do but it fires 20mm depleted uranium high explosive armor piercing rounds, and it can peel open a tank like it was a tin can.
RedDragon, on 27 June 2012 - 04:04 AM, said:
Look at it this way: In BT a round takes 10 seconds. A MG wouldn't be a MG if it fired only once in 10 seconds, would it? If you fire continuously, all the bullets fired within 10 seconds amount to 1 shot of those 200, and in 10 seconds you can fire A LOT of bullets, even at today's standards.
ok so then by your statement the machine gun in BT can fire continuously for 33.3 min off 1 ton of ammo so i can take only 1 ton of ammo and fire 15 machine guns for approxamately 2 min of continuous fire yet i dont see that happening in game...
Edited by Xaxius Colnier, 27 June 2012 - 04:31 AM.
#267
Posted 27 June 2012 - 04:35 AM
Xaxius Colnier, on 27 June 2012 - 04:22 AM, said:
Going strictly by TT-standards, yes, that would be the case. But I guess the designers had longer intervals of cool-down in mind, meaning that 1 shot (of 200) is one burst of fire in 10 seconds (or 2 smaller bursts, whatever). I think we can safely assume that at least 10 to 100 individual rounds would be fired in such a burst.
Btw. the MG ammo is a bad example for anything game related. the rules for its ammo have been broken from the start. In tabletop, most people even dropped the ammo when the game started, because there is no way you could spend that 200 shots in a single game and if the enemy hit your ammo, it would deal a ridiculous amount of damage to your mech (400 points of damage for a fully loaded MG ammo bin, enough to kill every mech instantly).
That's why there are rules (i.e. rapid-fire mode) to increase the effectiveness and ammo-consumption of the MG (rolling 1D6 to determine heat and damage, while the MG consumes 3x that value on ammunition).
#268
Posted 27 June 2012 - 04:45 AM
RedDragon, on 27 June 2012 - 04:35 AM, said:
Btw. the MG ammo is a bad example for anything game related. the rules for its ammo have been broken from the start. In tabletop, most people even dropped the ammo when the game started, because there is no way you could spend that 200 shots in a single game and if the enemy hit your ammo, it would deal a ridiculous amount of damage to your mech (400 points of damage for a fully loaded MG ammo bin, enough to kill every mech instantly).
That's why there are rules (i.e. rapid-fire mode) to increase the effectiveness and ammo-consumption of the MG (rolling 1D6 to determine heat and damage, while the MG consumes 3x that value on ammunition).
im just saying that the game obviously dosent follow table top rules for its mg ammo consumption
and im pretty sure they arent gonna make it one shot every ten second
Edited by Xaxius Colnier, 27 June 2012 - 04:51 AM.
#269
Posted 27 June 2012 - 04:50 AM
Xaxius Colnier, on 27 June 2012 - 04:22 AM, said:
cept your shooting a mech, not a tank


Maybe the MG rounds are Neutron enriched and thus very heavy

see how trying to fit real world physics in a fiction with loose physics doesn't work

#270
Posted 27 June 2012 - 04:56 AM
Phasics, on 27 June 2012 - 04:50 AM, said:
cept your shooting a mech, not a tank


Maybe the MG rounds are Neutron enriched and thus very heavy

see how trying to fit real world physics in a fiction with loose physics doesn't work

EXACTLY!!! Which is why all the people trying to argue over mech weights is silly because NONE of the math makes sence they should stop trying to force it to.
Edited by Xaxius Colnier, 27 June 2012 - 04:58 AM.
#271
Posted 27 June 2012 - 04:58 AM
Xaxius Colnier, on 27 June 2012 - 04:45 AM, said:
and im pretty sure they arent gonna make it one shot every ten second
Yes, but what I have seen of the ingame MG, it has 4000 rounds of ammo

Going by your "todays standards 200 rounds is only about 125 pounds", that would weight a bit over 1 ton, so what's the problem?

#272
Posted 27 June 2012 - 05:10 AM
Xaxius Colnier, on 27 June 2012 - 04:22 AM, said:
ok so then by your statement the machine gun in BT can fire continuously for 33.3 min off 1 ton of ammo so i can take only 1 ton of ammo and fire 15 machine guns for approxamately 2 min of continuous fire yet i dont see that happening in game...
Correction, A-10 does not carry Vulcan, it carry GAU-8 Avenger, that's the gatling gun that form the main armament of A-10 which is a 30mm gatling cannon not 20mm.
Vulcan is the name given to M61 20mm gatling cannon, but most ppl tend to get confused with them and apply the name vulcan to anything with gatling based operation at times.
In actuality however, neither 30mm shell or 20mm shell is capable of penetrating modern tank frontal armor, it is however sufficient to penetrate the roof armor of known MBT which are much thinner.
This however does not make much sense in the context with Battlemech because you are going to be firing it at his frontal armor... if you try to apply IRL logic to it, then the MG shells should be pinging off it's frontal armor, just like what would happen if you fired small caliber cannon shells, (and yes even 30mm depleted uranium shells are considered small scale as far as cannon caliber goes), against a tank's frontal armor (hence why IFV which are armed with autocannons ranging from 25-40mm can't scratch a tank's frontal armor and usually carry an anti tank missile launcher to handle that task).
It should be able to damage the weaker armored section of the battlemech, but by all account the MG should do jack all nothing besides scratching the paint work when fired at the main torso's frontal armor which should be the thickest and most armored section of a battlemech.
#273
Posted 27 June 2012 - 05:11 AM
RedDragon, on 27 June 2012 - 04:58 AM, said:

Going by your "todays standards 200 rounds is only about 125 pounds", that would weight a bit over 1 ton, so what's the problem?


oh and remember its the metric ton so its probably almost dead on. yay!
#275
Posted 27 June 2012 - 05:22 AM
Melcyna, on 27 June 2012 - 05:10 AM, said:
Vulcan is the name given to M61 20mm gatling cannon, but most ppl tend to get confused with them and apply the name vulcan to anything with gatling based operation at times.
In actuality however, neither 30mm shell or 20mm shell is capable of penetrating modern tank frontal armor, it is however sufficient to penetrate the roof armor of known MBT which are much thinner.
This however does not make much sense in the context with Battlemech because you are going to be firing it at his frontal armor... if you try to apply IRL logic to it, then the MG shells should be pinging off it's frontal armor, just like what would happen if you fired small caliber cannon shells, (and yes even 30mm depleted uranium shells are considered small scale as far as cannon caliber goes), against a tank's frontal armor (hence why IFV which are armed with autocannons ranging from 25-40mm can't scratch a tank's frontal armor and usually carry an anti tank missile launcher to handle that task).
It should be able to damage the weaker armored section of the battlemech, but by all account the MG should do jack all nothing besides scratching the paint work when fired at the main torso's frontal armor which should be the thickest and most armored section of a battlemech.
you are correct sir however i was confused because i recently watched a special on the F-22 raptor which does use a vulcan gun and for some reason the name stuck in my head thank you for fixing that
#276
Posted 27 June 2012 - 05:25 AM
Xaxius Colnier, on 27 June 2012 - 05:11 AM, said:

oh and remember its the metric ton so its probably almost dead on. yay!
I guess that's Pauls "Forumuserkiller"-variant of the Hunchback. It is shown in the short gameplay-video without music. Maybe Paul added more than 1 ton of ammo. I guess 2000 rounds/ton sounds more realistic.
#278
Posted 27 June 2012 - 05:31 AM
....
Edited by Purlana, 27 June 2012 - 05:33 AM.
#279
Posted 27 June 2012 - 05:35 AM

#280
Posted 27 June 2012 - 05:35 AM
1. What is a Ton in the Bt universe? is it 2000 pounds or 2240 pounds
weight, equivalent to 2000 pounds (0.907 metric ton) avoirdupois (short ton) in the U.S. and 2240 pounds (1.016 metric tons) avoirdupois (long ton) in Great Britian" - or some other equivelant
2. A 100 ton mech has a 10 ton internal structure (harden framework) with 10 heat sinks default, but if we add additional heat sink they weight 1 ton each, so a base structure for a 100 ton mech is 20 tons not include all the possible cabling, control runs, etc...
3. All weights are round to the nearest ton or .5 ton in some cases
4. A mech weights a fixed amount 100 ton, not 99 or 101, or any number not evenly divided by 5
5. It is a number used to classify and compare mechs
the ammo weight issue
1. 1 ton of mg ammo would not be just the bullets/shells is would have to include the loading mechanism and controls, and again it is rounded and it is just to simplified the mechanics of the game
for those that want a reason why mech could have been build verses what we have for AFV's like tanks, think exploring space and what type of vehicle would work best in unknown enivroment with the greatest mobility. Sure you can use self contained battle armor with transport, but then the armor has limited life support and endurance, a vehicle like a mech can carry a larger engine for endurance more lfe support, arms for manipilations. Just food for thought
these are just some passible conjectures on my part, i am sure there are others and no away invalidates other
ps: all spelling mistakes are my own

Edited by Dogbreed, 27 June 2012 - 05:39 AM.
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