Good idea, but since corduroy roads are so obvious to us, especially RFC [since Sherman's army made some almost all the way across the Carolina's S to N, IIRC] the question becomes why isn't Hanth and his engineers already using them?
Given control of the Seridahn, barges carrying 2000-3000 tons of timber should unloading at the nearest piers if the canal has consumed the nearest forests.
Two lanes would permit faster traffic so double your 23 per mile rate for the 5 miles for some 230 loads or 2300 tons, for a maximum of two barges being needed.
There are WW2 references to Sommerfeld Tracking, a portable wire reinforced roadway [128" X 906"] invented by a German engineer in England being use in Iraq, North Africa and Italy, besides Great Britain in 1941 if not earlier for roads and airfields, that often used a layer of coir as base since it absorbed quite a bit of water, which might be very useful to the engineers.
Evidently there are no Safehold equivalents to coir available to Hanth at the moment, but a bamboo type of Sommerfeld tracking or corduroy does seem indicated.
The fact that Green Valley is not concerned about the mess Hanth is in implies there's nothing more he can do to help or mitigate it.
L
JRM wrote:lyonheart wrote:Hi All,
I must have been sleepier than I thought.
Because I forgot to mention that a dragon wagon barely a third full, ie only 18-20,000 lbs would be only 4 cubic yards or 108 to 120 cubic feet; enough to fill several large pot holes, or a 6" layer of aggregate only 18 feet wide by 12-13&1/3 feet long.
if there were 12 per hour that could be up to 160 feet per hour, but I suspect at least 2 if not three, are needed for each nominal 12-13&1/3 feet section, for and an half improved road increase of at most ~1000' feet per day.
I also forgot to suggest they might increase the wagon load by adding an extra set of wagon wheels outboard of the current set to support increasing the load by 50-66%, which would help a lot, the main cost or obstacle being the increased turning circle required.
Given how torn up the high road seems to be, its quite possible General Rychtyr may have more drafted civilians tearing it up than Hanth has repairing it; until that changes, possibly by adding some of his infantry to the workforce, he's not going to get ahead of the problem.
Rychtyr was supposed to be reinforced by another 40-50,000 men in September according to HFQ, so Hanth is outnumbered from the numbers we have.
Rychtyr might counter attack, yet driving Hanth back 10-20+ miles, if that far in this muck, wouldn't really improve things from the Dohlar PoV strategically, though morale and propaganda might override that, although possibly reversing the supply situation is probably the last thing Rychtyr wants to do.
Who's going to be smart and go into winter quarters first?
L
Hi Lyonhart,
I think a better action would be corduroy roads.
Lieutenant Klymynt Hahrlys (designated "Bigfoot") gets stuck about five miles from the front. The freight wagons are carrying only a third of the 30 tons that a decent road would allow. If each wagon or articulated wagons brings 20 tons of green lumber 4"x12"x16' to the end of the decent road, it can drop off the beams and proceed with the 10 tons of supply that is currently getting through.
Each beam is laid perpendicular to the direction of the road on top of a couple of beams running in the direction of the road laid at approximately the width of the wagon wheels. Each perpendicular beam is bolted to the underlying beams. Soft ground would be an advantage as it would allow the beams to spread the load.
Twenty tons of green lumber beams would amount to 230 beams. That would mean that it would take 23 loads to cover a mile of road. As soon, as the corduroy road reaches the front, the transports can be returned to usual contents and weight.
James