The drop in trade with the continents may have encouraged more merchant seamen to join the navy, and so there may be more to serve on the schooners than thought, and RP may consider reducing the number of galleons if necessary to distribute the crews for schooners if it becomes that critical.
Before HFaF, the Raw Meat post put pre-jihad Charisian galleons at 2753, averaging 1300.4 tons each, before any new additional construction, so if most of that was involved in continental trade [~93% of population] that's some 2560 ships; most of which should still be available despite the focus on the empire's internal trade, ie plenty to deal with war cargo convoys to Siddarmark, possibly one every 5day or two since Charis can't be making that many munitions yet; so much may still be food or replacement agricultural machinery etc.
If a convoy leaves every 5day on a trip of ~35 days, there would be something near 14 convoys going both ways between Charis and the SR at any time, assuming loading and unloading can be done in a 5day, which might explain why the escort was so light though previous escorts mentioned in MTaT etc were much heavier, they were much bigger convoys and the current ones might only be a dozen or two.
Convoys may be great, but even a good convoy system removes the ship's annual carrying capacity by 50%, due to all the time in port waiting for all those scheduled to arrive.
Thus compelling all the EoC's merchant ships into convoys can have a devastating effect on the EoC's economy, if it isn't dealt with soon.
L
n7axw wrote:PeterZ wrote:*quote="n7axw"*I'm back beating on my convoy escorts drum again. I'm experiencing a bit of tension between Rock Point's internal ruminations in this snippet and RFC's posting in the Convoy Escorts thread where he claims there are lots of light craft, presumably schooners, available.
The only reconciliation I can see right now is there are still lots of schooners still in the hands of the privateer consortiums left over after everybody elses merchant traffic was wiped out. There must have been dozens of the things, maybe more. That would explain why Rock Point is currently short of hulls if the ICN havn't yet snarfed those up.
Anybody else with ideas?
Don*quote*
The more limiting factor is manpower. I believe those hulls are available, but the number of sailors are not. Not everyone that would serve on a privateer will want to join the ICN. Those consortiums might have been willing to sell the hulls, but were the sailors willing to join the ICN? Even if they were, until recently there was not enough money to pay for more sailors.
Now that those constraints have been lessened, perhaps more of those ships will be purchased for the ICN or contracted as convoy escorted.
Hi PeterZ,
A good thought and a possibility I hadn't considered.
Reflecting on that, I would note that the EOC has relied on recruitment rather than impressment which would imply that the shortage of manpower is not too critical.
Also, given the embargo, I wonder if there might not be a pool of unemployed seamen, since internal markets probably don't completely replace trade lost on the mainland.
Don