hmmm... Don's own numbers would make the requirement 14 million/month
however... both of you are quite likely overstating the requirement, even if we assume that no one in Charis knows how to run the numbers. nobody in his right mind fights an entire battle at maximum sustained rate of fire, so those 80 rounds are going to go a lot further than you think. at the same time, if you look at what seems to me to be the nearest comparable war, in operational terms, consider that in the final 2 years of the Peninsular War, from Ciudad Rodrigo to the fall of Napoleon, Wellington fought 9, maybe 10, set-piece battles, of which 4 were sieges and only 3 or 4 of the others were general actions with his entire army engaged. mostly it was 1 or 2 divisions against a French corps. meaning that on average a soldier fired more than a half dozen rounds perhaps one day every 4 months [sieges ended in surrender or cold steel, and didn't use a lot of musket balls]. and the Peninsula was probably the hardest-fought of all the campaigns; looking at the Napoleonic Wars in general it was rather closer to once a year.
that said, the scale of operations is going to be a _lot_ larger, meaning that there will be opportunities to burn through a couple of million rounds at a crack. still, i somehow doubt that the planners have overlooked that all this time.
fallsfromtrees wrote:n7axw wrote:I spent some time visualizing the job of the ammo supplier a while back and concluded that the situation wasn't quite as bad as it appears on first glance.
First, don't visualize 160,000 rifles in theatre right away. Visualize under 20,000. Then consider the time it takes to get the guns into place. After which consider that manufacture of ammo will have several months head start before the guns are in the hands of the troops. Now imagine that as the numbers of M96s begin to increase, production of ammo increases accordingly. Howsmyn mentioned a glitch in his conversation with Father Paityr, but didn't seem overly concerned about solving it.
Now about the number of days in combat. Four days per month per soldier is probably too many. Even armies seeking out the enemy are not averaging that. Most of a soldier's time is spent either in camp or enroute to the next encampment and planned battle. Eastshare's force spent several 5 days getting to his blocking position on the Daivyn several 5 day waiting on Kaitwryth's attack and a battle, IIRC, which lasted about a 5 day as he pushed Kaitswryth back. After Kaitswryth forted up in Cliff Peak, no combat expenditure of ammo at all.
The same is true as DE receives his reinforcements and goes off to Ft. Tairys. You have the push to get there, the seige and final assault. Then you have the wait to get HM into position in the Kyplyngyr. The only times you have heavy use of rifle ammo is during short periods of intense fighting. The rest of the time you have either no useage at all or light useage by small groups who are skirmishing.
Now on to BGV, he has an extended battle to push the AOG up the gap to Lake Wyvern and then minor, if nasty skirmishing by the scout snipers in the mountains on either side of the gap. BGV then begins his trip around toward Northland Gap to flank Wryshym. BGV was involved in no major battles in LAMA; only minor skimishing. That has been true for the better part of a year.
Remember the reserve kept in Old Province. No combat use of ammo at all there.
Finally, I don't know how much the armorer should allow for training purposes. 10% of total allotment??? Not sure...
What the ammo manufacturer needs to know is the total amount needed per month in theatre. My own belief is that it is more like 2 or 3 days per month statisticly for every man under arms. 4 days with about 180 rounds per day loadout should cover it very comfortably.
Don
Okay. 20,000 rifles and 1.6million rounds/month gives you about 80 rounds/rifle/month, with a rifle that fires about 10 rounds/minute in heavy combat or about 8 minutes/month. And the 20,000 in combat is low. Virtually all of the M96 rifles will be in heavy combat areas, because they provide such an advantage. The older breech loaders will be reserved for the rear areas, and secondary fronts. You are going to need much larger quantities of cartridges than they have talked about to date.