Pht, on 15 March 2012 - 11:31 PM, said:
Someone willing to actually interact and quote original sources...what a refreshing thing!
Yeah... feels good, doesn't it?
Pht, on 15 March 2012 - 11:31 PM, said:
Ahead of time just to make it clear, I am not saying that the weapons will have zero recoil when fired, I'm saying that the 'mech compensates for the recoil generated and the mechs on the recieving end compensate for whatever level of knock recieved.
I would agree, to a point.
Logically, any weapon platform - BattleMechs included - should be able to (mostly) handle the firing of its own weapons, and such heavy platforms as BattleMechs (especially the heavy- and assault-class 'Mechs) would be expected to be generally unperturbed by both the firing of single smaller/lighter weapons (AC-2, AC-5, LRM-5, etc) or small groups (say, up to four or so) thereof and strikes from the same, while substantially larger and more powerful weapons (AC-10, AC-20, Gauss Rifle, LRM 20, etc) would have more pronounced effects on said BattleMechs.
Pht, on 15 March 2012 - 11:31 PM, said:
Yes, and that is the one specific outlier that I mentioned; and even at that, it makes you do a PSR roll - not a gunnery roll! That means the recoil doesn't cause it to go off target.
With a single-shot, relatively short-barreled, high-velocity weapon like a HGR, I for one wouldn't expect the projectile to be in the barrel long enough for recoil to have any significant effect on the projectile - that will go where it was aimed.
Whether the recoil of firing the weapon has the 'Mech subsequently ending up on its keister, however, is another matter (one abstracted to being resolved by the PSR), yes?
Pht, on 15 March 2012 - 11:31 PM, said:
So far, a single instance, and somewhat questionable without the context.
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They don't indicate the effect the shaking has in your quote here.
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Yes, they commonly mention the pushback from firing lots of missiles, which do not suffer targeting problems because of it; it's a well known factor and we don't know if it affects other weapons or not, which very well may have compensation routines, and strictly speaking, we don't know if the stagger is enough to throw aim off for the other weapons from the quote.
Well, I did include direct links to the sources, the first two are PDFs (viewable in-browser, depending on one's set-up) and the third is in e-book format on epubbud.
An extended quotation for the first (
Wolf and Blake, pg. 08):
"It was a heavy machine, a gray-painted
Excalibur. She saw the silver flash of the Gauss rifle round that caved in Barstow’s cockpit, shearing the
Phoenix Hawk’s head clean off even as the
Hawk’s lasers stitched emerald light across the
Excalibur’s torso. Stacy snarled a wolf’s smile and squeezed her triggers.
The LB 10-X autocannon in the Zeus’ left forearm belched fire and kicked, the recoil momentarily swinging the Zeus’ torso out of alignment. Stacy fought her controls and brought the
Zeus’ other weapons to bear even as the cannon fire tore at the
Excalibur’s chest. The heavy PPC erupted to life, cutting at the
Excalibur’s shattered armor and exploding through it. White-hot ravening particles ate at the ’Mech’s inner structure, tearing at the protection around its fusion engine. A flare on the
Zeus’s infrared monitors told her she denuded the engine of protection, and it automatically shut down to prevent a rupture. The
Excalibur collapsed backward, smoking, as Stacy slowed the
Zeus near the wreckage of Barstow’s
Phoenix Hawk."
It seems to be an account of one Captain Stacy Church of the Black Widow Company, combating the Manei Domani on Outreach in 3070.
An extended quotation for the second (
Fist and Falcon, pg. 03):
"The
BattleMaster’s primary targeting reticule flashed from red to green as the assault ’Mech exited the building. Michael jerked his controls, bringing the crosshairs to rest over the
Mad Cat’s torso. He breathed in, half a breath, waiting until he felt the shot, then squeezed the trigger.
All eighty-five tons of the BattleMaster shook with recoil as the Gauss rifle fired. The hiss-crack of the hypersonic round firing blended with the bang as the solid shot struck the
Mad Cat high on the chest, just beneath the box missile launcher. Michael squeezed his other trigger. Four needle-sharp ER medium lasers flickered, burning away more armor. The
Mad Cat lurched sideways, half-crushing the sheet-metal wall of the building it’d been examining."
It seems to be an account of one Michael Guillaume of the Kewran Wolfhounds, combating the Jade Falcons on Albany-8 in 3071.
An extended quotation for the third (
Blood of Heroes, chapter 28):
"'Captain Radcliffe, concentrate on the
Union.' Radcliffe's tank platoon included a trio of
Harasser missile platforms, two fitted out with SRM launchers, the third mounting a heavier LRM system. Although they lacked the punch of the fire-support 'Mechs, the hover tanks had the advantage of being fast and maneuverable. They could get in close, take their shots, and withdraw again quickly before the DropShip gunners could react—or at least that was the plan. Combined with sustained fire from Carlyle's
Archer, they would certainly make the crew of the
Union Class notice the Legion.
Alex waited for the targeting cross hairs to flash red, then hit the firing studs for both missile racks in quick succession.
The Archer staggered under the multiple recoil of forty missiles streaking from the tubes.
Slow and stately, the DropShip was lifting off, but it gathered speed as it rose from the tarmac like some impossible prehistoric flying beast disturbed from an age-long slumber. There was a rippling of explosions near the underside of the spherical vessel as some of Alex's missiles found their mark, but he didn't even bother with the BDA readouts. He knew the attack wouldn't cause enough damage to penetrate the thick armor. Not yet."
It seems to be an account of one Alex Carlyle of the Gray Death Legion, combating what seem to be elements of the Free Skye Movement on Glengarry in 3056.
In each case, there doesn't seem to have been any damage to the 'Mech-in-question or its systems, nor does there seem to be a case of unstable terrain or poor footing on the part of the 'Mech-in-question.
As such, it would seem like the cited recoil/rocking is part of normal operations.
Pht, on 15 March 2012 - 11:31 PM, said:
The galahad fluff text only says they had recoil problems which have since been fixed; in fact, it seems to be mentioned as somewhat of a design flaw and outlier.
The shadowhawk IIC fluff is only saying that it produces recoil; which does not necessitate the additional conclusion that said recoil is enough to throw the 'mechs aim off.
I already mentioned the HGR. There is no other weapon with those kinds of recoil generation problems. The improved HGR is just another version of the HGR; it's no suprise that it has the same problems.
Given that the
Galahad did remain in SLDF service and eventually evolved into the Clans'
Glass Spider (which the IS codenamed...
Galahad!

), I would be inclined to agree.
However, the example of Guillaume's
BattleMaster would seem to indicate that the recoil from a standard Gauss Rifle can be significant and noticeable (if not necessarily "an issue") to even an assault-class 'Mech (and a presumably well-designed one at that).
The example of the Shadow Hawk IIC was meant more to back up the example of Carlyle's
Archer, in demonstrating that the missile systems (even smaller ones like the ATM-6)
do produce
some recoil (as opposed to being wholly recoilless).
Though, the recoil of the small missile rack is presumably small enough that even a light 'Mech in space combat would be minimally affected, while dual-fired twin LRM-20s will apparently cause noticeable rocking in even a 70-ton
Archer.
And... well, the HGRs' issues have already been covered in sufficient depth, yes?
Pht, on 15 March 2012 - 11:31 PM, said:
So far you've only produced one quote - the one about the zues and the lbx; a singular instance. I'd be interested to see the full context to see if they give a "why.'
See above.
Pht, on 15 March 2012 - 11:31 PM, said:
You do realize that if these systems cannot compensate for knock that they would have an even harder time with recoil? The recoil systems of the various weapons don't dump their recoil energy into nowhere land, they dump it into the mech firing the weapons.
If you accept your own argument than 'mechs would have to suffer even more from recoil effects than from knock effects.
It's not possible to have your cake and eat it too.
I do seem to recall acknowledging that, in general, "recoil to the attacker ≥ knock to the target".
However, I see the process of maintaining balance while firing such weapons to involve two systems:
1.) the recoil damping system built into the weapons themselves, and
2.) the balancing system inherent to the 'Mech (controlled by the DI computer, and employing the gyro and the BattleMech's DIC-controlled
proprioception ("the sense of the relative position of neighbouring parts of the body and strength of effort being employed in movement")).
The combined effects of both (1) and (2) would allow most BattleMechs to mostly deal with the effects of recoil from their own ballistic and missile weapons (with energy weapons having so little recoil as to be negligible), but
only (2) would help dealing with knockback and armor loss from being struck with another platform's weapons.
After all, how would having a recoil damping system integral to 'Mech A's right-arm-mounted AC-10 help 'Mech A deal with the momentum and KE transfer from being struck in the right-torso by a slug from 'Mech B's right-arm-mounted Gauss Rifle?
Pht, on 15 March 2012 - 11:31 PM, said:
It is not. So far, the source you've quoted has not clearly and expressly said that recoil (or knock) affects the 'mechs at a level to affect their targeting and balance (The HGRs are the extreme and merely serve to illustrate the upper end of the 'mech's capabilities in this area), nor have any of the quotes, by good and necessary implication implied such.
Given that the firing of an LB-X AC-10 was able to "momentarily swing a Zeus’ torso out of alignment" to the point that the pilot had to "fight her controls to bring the
Zeus’ other weapons to bear even as the cannon fire tore at the target", it would seem that recoil can (not necessarily
must, but
can) have some effect on targeting.
(FWIW, that exact
Zeus variant is listed on Sarna.net as the "ZEU-9WD
Zeus-X Stacy" (though, Sarna cites its creation date as 3071 while
Wolf and Blake specifically gives the date of the described battle as January 22, 3070

), with the
Zeus' LB-X AC-10 being named in
Wolf and Blake as a Defiance Disintegrator.)
Pht, on 15 March 2012 - 11:31 PM, said:
I don't think that said weapons do not have those recoil systems; I'm not arguing that at all.
I'm arguing that the said recoil systems work, and that the 'mech itself has to handle the recoil energy, and so can absorb the knock that virtaually any incoming fire will generate.
I, too, believe that these systems "work", but I also feel that there is enough evidence to reasonably support the claim that they have their limits, and are able to negate only
most - not
all - of the effects of both the recoil generated by firing the larger, higher-damage weapons.
Your thoughts?
Edited by Strum Wealh, 16 March 2012 - 07:17 AM.