Making ammo runs into the same problem. Muscle powered presses and drawing tools can only work so fast. The amount of labor required to make 1 round of ammo would make creating useful volumes cost prohibitive. Given the labor requirements, I hope the CoGA does try to replicate the weapons. The small but non- trivial variations in both rounds and the rifle will cause jams and misfires. The amount labor, money and most importantly time needed to manufacture the required numbers would mean very little else is produced.
JRM wrote:
Hi Peter,
I don't agree. What was said is that without standardization of measurements, the parts from one "manufactory" would not fit with another. With 5,000 M96 rifles, they can use actual working parts as templates. If they spread the parts to suppliers, and require the manufactured parts to be identical within the margin of difference that Zhwaigair measured with the earlier rifles, they probably can make their own rifles.
As for cartridges, the only thing that was new technology with the cartridges, was the design and the creation of machinery to do the manufacturing process.
If they captured a steam engine then they will be able to bypass, design steps, stress calculation, testing, and go straight to manufacturing. They already captured the Charis' current steel making process.
James