KalebFenoir, on 25 February 2013 - 08:32 PM, said:
Personally I loved listening to my friend describe the firing sound of the BT autocannons. Standard ACs sounded and looked like oversized pistols unless they were the aforementioned multi-shell types, in which case they still were like semi-auto pistols in speed. LB-X were clearly shotguns. Ultras were a double-tap variety of AC, or in the case of the multiple-shell type, if you took the sound of the standard model and multiplied the speed by 2. And the RAC... oh the RAC. Once it spun up to full velocity, just picture the A-10 Warthog's main gun. And then have it jam so horribly within the first shell firing that the entire feed is destroyed, the mechanism jams, the gun effectively dismantles itself from the inside, and you can't use it again. XD Ever.
Which is ironic because rotary multi barrel guns were used PRECISELY because of the system's reliability, which it achieved at the sacrifice of weight and volume (they were significantly more bulky and heavy compared to single barrel autocannon, which incidentally can actually fire VERY rapidly assuming one can accept the heat and jamming chance to it)
So BT turned it upside down, but hey... lostech is the magic word
the funny thing of course is that BT's AC never actually achieved rate of fire that warrants multi barrel assembly at all, but most ppl are not aware of just how fast single barrel autocannons can actually fire, that and well... in games at least, gatling cannons have an extra oompph in style (even if it doesn't make any sense in the game)
And Stuka? not difficult, anyone half knowledgeable with WW2 hardwares can answer that in split second since there are only 2 planes the german used for ground attack extensively (read: different from bombers) either it's the Stuka, or it's the Ju-88, and the Stuka is the only one with the underwing autocannon pod (BK-37), in Ju-88 they mount the autocannon in ventral pod instead, very easy to recognize and distinguish.
Skylarr, on 26 February 2013 - 12:02 PM, said:
This would be true if they were heavily reliant on guided weaponry... or if their weapon needed those sensor feeds information to actually aim properly at long range (real ECM for example will reduce effectiveness of radar in accurately ranging the target, which makes the aircraft protected by it more difficult to shoot at properly given all anti aircraft battery needs proper range data)
But given that BT's weaponry have a heavy emphasis on direct fire weapon, and they don't move at any appreciable speed, this doesn't make much sense, especially so since in ground warfare the only variable you really need if your target doesn't move like a rocket is distance
and we got a WHOLE slew of ways to measure or estimate distance for ground combat (where you can be less precise and still hit unlike in aerial combat), most of which is impossible to jam short of being outright invisible.
This incidentally is another typical mistake of sci fi authors, many thinks that Radar is the one thing that military weapons relied on, incorrect, radar is to a degree very vital for AERIAL combat indeed, but as far as ground warfare is concerned, radar is far less vital, and this is one of the reason why jamming in ground warfare (mostly to jam radio communication) involves different things than aerial jamming (where they jam guidance and detection radar primarily)
Edited by Melcyna, 26 February 2013 - 01:12 PM.