Craig Steele, on 04 February 2014 - 09:50 PM, said:
I'm guessing English is maybe not your first language so I'll try and reduce the volume.
First and only language, but thanks for the insult.
Craig Steele, on 04 February 2014 - 09:50 PM, said:
a) There is no Canon to support that. No Source, No Rulebook (novels are not canon, same as the cartoon Somerset Strikers is not) You might have found the word, but it wasn't in Webster. If you have a canon source I am happy to change my view 180. I don't mind growing my understanding of the BT franchise at all.
Please refer to
http://bg.battletech...php?topic=586.0 regarding what is "canon". I don't want to give too much away before you read it, but novels ARE canon unless printed in Germany (with a notable exception for Mr Bills). Tons of info, but I have been reading it for too long already and need to finish this reply before it is completely irrelevant...
Craig Steele, on 04 February 2014 - 09:50 PM, said:
b ) I think the physics and other suggestions of canon indicate it is more likely a burst weapon. This is my deduction.
I completely agree. Autocannons, while having single-round-per-cooldown exceptions possible, should be burst-fire by default. We are in agreement on this from the looks of it.
Craig Steele, on 04 February 2014 - 09:50 PM, said:
c) Throughout rule and source books where canon refers to a weapon in a calibre it is around that formula (185mm Chem Jet for AC20 as an example). As I said, it appears to be a convention of the day by the writers.
I also agree with this now that I have looked at a few other fanboy sources, though I haven't actually saw any canon source that says it specifically. I know they need people to buy the sourcebooks to make money, but it sure would be nice if they made the rules available online somewhere...
Craig Steele, on 04 February 2014 - 09:50 PM, said:
d) I think I outlined my understanding of the Guass workings. Canon describes it as a metal slug, not a "large" metal slug. pg 216 3050 TR "is a slug of nickel ferrous metal". Pretty sure 30 smaller slugs in a burst can rip an arm off too (certainly happens in modern warfare with automatic fire), but perhaps not as romantically.
I have read a few examples of where revisions to certain descriptions have added or omitted phrases. For example, regarding the AC/20, in TRO:3039, the description on page 86 was "With two turret-mounted 185mm guns, the Demolisher is an intimidating machine. The titanic weapons use a popular propellant system that mixes two chemicals in suspension to propel a stream of huge shells at the luckless target", while TRO:3026 instead says, "The Demolisher is an efficient battle machine. It's two turret-mounted 185mm guns use a popular propellant system that mixes two chemicals in suspension to propel the huge shells out of the barrel."
Obviously, TPTB decided in the later books to specifically describe it as a burst-fire weapon to remove any doubt.
Now, the image that is shown for the Gauss could very well be along the same lines. When the artist made the image to begin with, it could have been a stock image that someone just assigned to the Gauss for lack of anything better, it could have been described to the artist as having a belt-fed system, or many other reasons. In the novels, though, it is consistently described as a large slug of metal fired one-at-a-time and lodging in actuators and such.
Craig Steele, on 04 February 2014 - 09:50 PM, said:
You found a definition in Wikipedia, not in Websters. If people are going to quote Sarna as "proof" of canon they need to understand that it is filled with contradictions to stuff published by the owners. Most recently I found out the Timberwolf's first deployment was pushed back 80 years in Sarna because it didn't suit someone else. Comparable crime, no. Evidence of flaws to canon source, absolutely.
You seem to be arguing from the viewpoint that I think you're wrong. I am not arguing that at all.
In journalism, they are supposed to actually check the sources for accuracy before they represent it as fact. Your last paragraph suggests you have not checked the source or the duplication so I think my point still stands.
Even canon has contradictions, as I detailed above. Things change over decades, and that is true for an evolving game such as Battletech as well. Disregarding sources that are well documented, though, just because you don't agree with them (or do and just don't like them, I'm not sure which is the case for you), is not the way to handle it.
I check the facts as much as I can, but I am not above admitting when I am wrong or mistaken. I will defend what I say with proof wherever possible, and I wish I still had all my TROs just for that reason, actually, but I don't. Instead, I am using the only source I have available, and that is a compilation with references like Sarna.
Edited by Cimarb, 05 February 2014 - 06:36 PM.