One of the qualities was training. Suppose one force was well trained, recently trained, and was trained on the relevant weapons and best tactics. An officer might assign that force a 3. If the enemy force were poorly trained long ago on the wrong weapons, an officer might assign that force a 1. All else being equal, one should expect a well trained force of 1110 people to easily defeat any force of poorly trained people up to 3330, since 1110 times 3 is 3330.
The difference for training can be FAR higher than 3-1.
Same goes for tactics and equipment.
There were several qualities other than training. I definitely remember morale, or how eager the force was to fight. I also remember equipment being one quality. Dunnigan wrote that officers had expressed the opinion that a well-trained, eager force with inferior weapons could easily defeat a poorly-trained, discouraged enemy with superior weapons, because the former force had a multiplier of 3 times 3 times 1, or 9, while the latter had 1 times 1 times 3, or three.
But if that fight was over open ground and the superior weapons were machineguns while the others play with muskets, i´m not going to expect the well-trained force to win no matter what.
I wonder...have any of you read the book, or books on similar topics? What other qualities might a force possess that might give them a multiplier?
Have read a fair amount of books on military forces yes.
*****
But not all units are equal. For example, US tank battalions have a little over 50 tanks while some Soviet style tank battalions have only about 30. To acocunt for this size difference, covert the actual number of units into "US Equivalents."
Just converting purely by numbers will not take into account how those numbers are used.
Our force ratio is now 16 enemy battalion equivalents opposed by 9 friendly battalions, or 1.8:1.
Yes, but those Soviet forces will still maneuver as 27 units, not 16. The flanking (or bypass or overrun) that is likely to allow will have great effect by itself.
This now gives us battalion equivalents of 16 threat and 18 friendly battalions, changing our force ratio to about 1:1.1.
That are still going to by outmaneuvered as long as the guy in charge of those T-55s are even halfway to competent.
*****
and Tiger tanks were also notoriously unreliable. PanzerBattalion 101, which was the Divisional Tiger formation during the Normandy breakout could only field 18 working tanks at any given time against the Canadian and Polish divisions massed against them.
Incorrect. Tigers could be VERY reliable as long as they were properly handled AND had proper maintenance. First ever attack using Tigers found out the first very blatantly when barely any tanks actually took part in the attack(Northwest USSR), while in France 1944, getting spare parts was pretty much unrealistic.
And contrary to "Saving Private Ryan", there were no Tiger tanks at all facing the Americans, much of the damage was caused by agressive commanders fighting in Pz.Kpfw. IV tanks, which were roughly equal to contemporary Allied tanks.
I always find it amusing how many "Tigers" were destroyed by US troops...
Actually, the Pz-IV was overall grossly inferior to most of the wallied tanks.
Simply because they were designed as 20 ton tanks, and by mid 1944, they weighed closer to 30 tons and their hulls and suspensions and pretty much anything to do with drivetrain or moving parts were horribly overstressed far beyond realistic use.
Many Pz-IV at the time went into battle plowing earth before it because the suspension was already broken down.