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MASSIVE SPOILER about next book hardware

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Re: MASSIVE SPOILER about next book hardware
Post by tasos74   » Sun Apr 01, 2012 12:27 am

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Hummm....

If the northern canals freeze during the winter, can the IC military take the northern ones? If so can glacierheart be relieved like Bastogne by Patton? If the north is taken, how will it effect Clyntahn's war plans with hostile forces on the border with the Temple Lands?
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Re: MASSIVE SPOILER about next book hardware
Post by Renegade13   » Sun Apr 01, 2012 10:26 pm

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I'm really not sure where you are getting your numbers from. The 904 miles number would be for a basic 'design load' of fuel. The 1,900 miles number is for a maximum bunkage loadout. (It is nice to see that RFC remembered that the fuel economy would decrease with the higher load, and slowly increase as the fuel was used; creating a lighter and lighter ship as the fuel load decreases)

Hallofaman wrote:ok i have a question.... are these listed endurance at the design load out or maximum?

Bunkerage: 480 tons (design); 1,172 tons (maximum)

Endurance: 904 miles/1,900 miles @ 9.5 knots/mph

because if it is at design, then their maximum range before they have to go coaling is a little over 4,600 miles @ 9.5 knots.....

ofcorse trying to fight the ship with a maximum load out might be a bit lively....
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Re: MASSIVE SPOILER about next book hardware
Post by lyonheart   » Mon Apr 02, 2012 6:42 pm

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Hi Renegade13,

Given the 6' draft, and the propensity of cities to establish themselves on rivers in conjunction with land routes, the potential arises for the ironclads, especially if their muzzle-loaders are replaced by breech-loaders using cordite, the range of targets might be dramatically increased, and the prospect of cities surrendering to ironclad led invasions (marines now in powered landing craft :-) might be a feature of book number 7 or 8.

Feel free to disagree,

L


Renegade13 wrote:I'm really not sure where you are getting your numbers from. The 904 miles number would be for a basic 'design load' of fuel. The 1,900 miles number is for a maximum bunkage loadout. (It is nice to see that RFC remembered that the fuel economy would decrease with the higher load, and slowly increase as the fuel was used; creating a lighter and lighter ship as the fuel load decreases)

Hallofaman wrote:ok i have a question.... are these listed endurance at the design load out or maximum?

Bunkerage: 480 tons (design); 1,172 tons (maximum)

Endurance: 904 miles/1,900 miles @ 9.5 knots/mph

because if it is at design, then their maximum range before they have to go coaling is a little over 4,600 miles @ 9.5 knots.....

ofcorse trying to fight the ship with a maximum load out might be a bit lively....
Any snippet or post from RFC is good if not great!
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Re: MASSIVE SPOILER about next book hardware
Post by Dutch46   » Mon Apr 02, 2012 9:27 pm

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lyonheart wrote:Hi Renegade13,

Given the 6' draft, and the propensity of cities to establish themselves on rivers in conjunction with land routes, the potential arises for the ironclads, especially if their muzzle-loaders are replaced by breech-loaders using cordite, the range of targets might be dramatically increased, and the prospect of cities surrendering to ironclad led invasions (marines now in powered landing craft :-) might be a feature of book number 7 or 8.

Feel free to disagree,

L


Renegade13 wrote:I'm really not sure where you are getting your numbers from. The 904 miles number would be for a basic 'design load' of fuel. The 1,900 miles number is for a maximum bunkage loadout. (It is nice to see that RFC remembered that the fuel economy would decrease with the higher load, and slowly increase as the fuel was used; creating a lighter and lighter ship as the fuel load decreases)

Hallofaman wrote:ok i have a question.... are these listed endurance at the design load out or maximum?

Bunkerage: 480 tons (design); 1,172 tons (maximum)

Endurance: 904 miles/1,900 miles @ 9.5 knots/mph

because if it is at design, then their maximum range before they have to go coaling is a little over 4,600 miles @ 9.5 knots.....

ofcorse trying to fight the ship with a maximum load out might be a bit lively....


I will take a stab at explaining the difference. Mechanical devices usually have a rated or continuous rating load, speed or whatever which uses them at their most efficient output (get the most out for the amount of energy put in) but can be operated above that limit at a lesser efficiency and sometimes shorter operating life. So, these ships, after taking on the maximum amount of bunkerage (fuel) have a range 1,900 miles at a speed of 9.5 knots. Any speed above that will shorten the range. Speeds below that may or may not extend the range. The longer range takes into account that it is operating at it's maximum efficiency point and also that as the fuel load decreases it will get more miles to the ton of coal so to speak.

This is not what they would prefer to enter combat with though because the increased weight of the fuel may present handling and maximum speed problems. The ideal load for combat would be 480 tons of fuel giving the ship an unspecified but much lower range due to the much higher fuel consumption required for operation at its maximum speed of 18 knots. This speed will allow them to overtake anything currently afloat with shocking ease. More than that, their attack vectors will not be limited by the winfd direction and so they will have a really serious advantage over anything that propels itself with sail. In addition, the higher speed will mean much lower dwell times in enemy kill zones while still retaining the ability to hammer them and take hits from them due to its armor. All in all, a giant step forward in naval warfare.
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Re: MASSIVE SPOILER about next book hardware
Post by Dutch46   » Tue Apr 03, 2012 11:02 pm

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After reading these posts, I have an observation concerning the name RFC has given the steam ships. He named these an "Ironclad River Gunboat of Casemate Design". However, looking at the design specs, these are capable of ocean travel and are certainly not limited to usage on rivers and estuaries. We do not know certain other nice to know details such as the turning radius, stopping distance from full speed etc. but I can easily envision these ships ranging throughout the Gulf of Dohlar and some ways up navigable waterways.

In Vietnam, I served for a time on a PBR, Patrol Boat River. Just because its name implied that it was for use on rivers didn't mean that we didn't, on several occasions, find ourselves in the South China sea, well out of sight of land sometimes in 25 to 30 foot seas as well as on the Mekong river close to the Cambodian border. It was a very versatile craft capable of doing a whole lot of things including close in shore operations support that didn't show up in the name. I don't expect these ships to be any different.
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Re: MASSIVE SPOILER about next book hardware
Post by Silverwall   » Wed Apr 04, 2012 5:49 am

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I sincerely doubt that this vessel will ever get even close to it's theoretical Max speed of 18 (safehold) knots.

Using the displacement hull speed equation v_{hull} \approx 1.34 \times \sqrt{LWL} (from wikipedia) we find that the value by RFC is effetivly the max hull speed for the length of the ship.

While this is all fine and dandy so far we now have to deal with some nasty real world issues. First power requirements increase exponentially as you approach hull speed limits. Even with help from Merlin you cannot get that sort of performance from a piston powered steam engine. You can only get close with a steam trubine that is way beyond the tech required.

Secondly the low freeboard has a terrible effect on speed as in any sort of seaway other than dead calm the ship ends up driving it's nose under the breaking waves and sapping off a huge amount of power. Just compare the Royal Soverign class 410 feet,19 feet 6 inches freeboard and a speed of 17.5 knots with the contemporary Hood which had the same hull design and machinery but with a lower freeboard. 11 feet 3 inches and a consequent top speed of about 15.5 knots. The Royal navy was not happy and never again built low freeboard battleships because of the poor performance in rough seas.

To give you an idea of what is plausable with the technology of the time the hull speed for 410 feet is 27 knots. This suggests that even assuming that the Howmsmyn machinery is as effecient as that on the Royal Sovereign (it almost certainly isn't) proportionality suggests that we could expect the proposed gunboat to have an effective top speed of between 8-12 safehold Knots which is still highly respectable for a ship of her size. (Yes I know these things don't scale linearly but it's a good first order approximation.)

To compare to a modern ship we can take the Cornelia Marie from the dealiest catch, she is 128 feet (39 m) long, 28 feet (8.5 m) wide and with twin Mitsubishi engines generate 630 horsepower for a top speed of around 10 (Earth) knots.
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Re: MASSIVE SPOILER about next book hardware
Post by blackjack217   » Wed Apr 04, 2012 10:25 am

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runsforcelery wrote:
Lyonheart, if I wanted you to know all of that stuff, I'd already have told you, wouldn't I? You are, however, assuming some facts not in evidence and doing some misinterpreting.

(1) I never said that there wasn't a physical obstruction in the way of connecting the gulf of Dohlar and the Gulf of Jahras directly; I responded specifically to the question of why the Salthar Canal wasn't used to transport the Royal Dohlaran Navy in the run-up to the Armageddon Reef campaign.


(2) I don't know exactly what maps will be in Toil and Tribulation; I make suggestions and then we find out exactly what we're going to have time/resources to get in. The main emphasis in the upcoming book is going to be on the Republic of Siddarmark, so I would imagine that that's where the maps will be concentrated, and the Salthar Canal (and Grand Duchy of Silkiah) may or may not be included.


(3) The non-use of the canal wasn't mentioned by the Group of Four as proof that the Temple wasn't behind the war because drawing attention to it would simply have convinced people they had to be lying because their lips were moving. They'd already done everything that could be done to "prove" it was the Knights of the Temple Lands and not Mother Church behind all of this, and they weren't interested in drawing any attention to the "sneak attack" by pointing out ahead of time that they weren't using the canal. Since the allegations that the Group of Four was actually behind it have been floating around, they've chosen not to address the problem in part because they didn't want the fact that Silkiah was busy ignoring the embargo brought to public attention, for a lot of reasons. You may have noticed that they haven't said a great deal about Silkiah one way or the other — not publicly, at any rate.


(4) The city of Silkiah has been around virtually since the Day of Creation; the Grand Duchy of Silkiah is a much more recent creation, taking its name from the major city in the territory. The wars between the Republic of Siddarmark and the Desnairian Empire which led to the creation of the Grand Duchy began around 680, about 200 years ago, when Desnair invaded the Siddarmarkian province of Shiloh across what was then the unclaimed (and largely un-terraformed) South March Lands. There were several reasons for the invasion, but one of them was that Siddarmark had essentially turned the city of Silkiah into an overseas extension of the Republic, with local coasters transshipping canal cargoes across the Gulf of Mathyas to Trokhanos and Malitar Provinces. Desnair wanted the cargoes to go south, down the Silkiahan coast to the Gulf of Jahras; Silkiah didn't much like Desnair and preferred to deal with Siddarmark. The war between Siddarmark and Desnair technically didn't have a thing to do with Silkiah or the canal; in fact, it had quite a lot to do with it, and everyone knew it, but it's not considered polite to fight over canals in Safehold partly because the construction and maintenance of the canals are both enjoined upon all sons and daughters of Mother Church as religious duties in the Book of Langhorne.

At first, the Desnairian cavalry crushed the Siddarmarkian militia and army. By the time the Third Desnair-Siddarmark War was fought, however, Siddarmark had effectively reinvented the Swiss pike square and proceeded to kick Desnair in the belly and then dance up and down on its spine for the next fifty years or so. By the time the Church intervened effectively, Siddarmark had pushed south into North Watch far enough to be halfway around the inland edge of the Gulf of Jahras. This is one reason why everybody on the mainland has been scared to death of the Siddarmarkian Army prior to the introduction of flintlocks and artillery, and a huge reason why Clyntahn was dead set against allowing Siddarmark to acquire any of the "new model" war fighting technology. ("They can already kill any other army on the continent, and you want to give them rifles, too?! How crazy are you?!”) As a means of separating the contestants, the Church created the Grand Duchy of Silkiah (out of land which was still largely uninhabited) and specifically demilitarized the Salthar Canal. And by "demilitarized," I don't mean simply that you couldn't pass warships through it, but that you weren't allowed to use it for military purposes of any sort, which was intended to handicap future military campaigns by either side along the isthmus between Howard and East Haven.


(4) Did I tell you how big the locks were built? They're a lot bigger than any of the "animal-draft" canals on Old Earth were, because dragons can draw greater weights. You will find out all kinds of things about the canals, why they were built the size they were, whether or not they're still being built that size, etc., in the next book, and I'm not going to tell you about them now. Sorry about that.


(5) What makes you think it took until the eighth or ninth century for canals to become political objectives? This particular canal was a major contributing factor for a series of wars beginning in the late seventh century. The canal itself was not of enormous importance until perhaps a hundred years before that because there weren't any people in the vicinity. It was only as Trokhanos and Malitar in Siddarmark and the area around the Gulf of Jahras in Desnair began attracting large numbers of people that the Salthar Canal became especially significant, since it was never intended for oceanic transport in the first place, which meant it was basically a "local feeder" system rather than one with huge strategic importance. That doesn’t mean other canals didn’t have significant political, economic, and/or military importance before that time.


(6) Where did I say the canal is 20 feet deep? I didn't. I said that you couldn't get oceanic galleons, with drafts in excess of twenty feet through them; I never said that you could get oceanic galleons with drafts of twenty feet or less through them. Oceanic galleons tend to have drafts of around 18-25 feet; therefore, what I was saying was that you can't get oceanic galleons — period — through them, that one of the reasons is the depth of the canal, and that galleons tend to be around twenty feet deep, which simply means that the canals have to be less than 19 feet deep or so.


(7) I'm not going to tell you how wide the canal is.


(8) Yes, it might have been, but you couldn't get them through the thing.


(9) Desnair collects tribute from Silkiah; Silkiah is not a Desnairian possession. It is, in fact, specifically not a possession of either Siddarmark or Desnair. The tribute that it pays to Desnair was intended largely as a deliberate smack in the teeth to Siddarmark on the part of the Church when the Grand Duchy was created, in no small part because Siddarmark had . . . failed to note certain hints from the Church that Mother Church thought it would be a good idea for the Siddarmarkian army to go home rather than continuing to advance into Desnair. The tribute itself is pretty much nominal (it actually consists primarily of a requirement that Silkiah give Desnairian cargo passing through the canal a preferential rate), and it is officially justified not as a means of punishing Siddarmark for its hubris but as a way of compensating Desnair for the fact that it was not — then — possible to transport by canal from the gulf of Dohlar to eastern Desnair. It still isn't, for that matter, although there is now an additional canal link to the Gulf of Jahras from Hankey Sound, using one of the internal river lines, making the Salthar Canal itself less critical. Desnair still doesn't have direct canal connections between its northwestern provinces and the eastern portion of the empire, however, and the Gulf of Jahra’ canal termini are one of the big reasons the Gulf was so critical to the Empire's economy . . . and why the shipyards were placed predominantly there, rather than farther south.


(10) I didn't say Dohlar felt threatened by Harchong, Siddarmark, and Desnair; I said King Rahnyld can't expand because he's surrounded by powerful kingdoms that wouldn't welcome his intrusion. I'm not sure why you think Rahnyld's father might have been removed by the Church, nor do I understand why the creation of a buffer zone between Desnair and Siddarmark should be seen as a threat by Dohlar. If Desnair was permitted to use Silkiah as a militarily occupied province, it would be a damned poor "buffer" against Siddarmark, wouldn't it? You seem to be leaping to quite a few conclusions about who owns and controls what in the Grand Duchy. And I can't conceive of any reason why Rahnyld of Dohlar would have favored Charis over Desnair when what Rahnyld wanted was to try and build a merchant marine that would allow him to expand his power and his economy in the knowledge that overland expansion was impossible for him. Desnair is not and never was a maritime competitor to Dohlar, nor has Dohlar regarded Desnair as any particular military threat for at least a century or two.


(11) As I pointed out before, there is no 20 feet of draft available, so no one was going to build anything except relatively shallow draft, small coasters — or barges — to use the canals.


(12) You do realize how capital intensive canal building in a muscle-powered civilization is, don't you? The expansion and maintenance of the canal system is a religious duty, but when it ain't broke, you don't fix it, and until Charis came along, there was no international maritime trade worth talking about. You do remember what I said about Charis being willing to venture out of sight of land while no one else was? About how Charis got in on the ground floor of international maritime commerce? Charis had to build real ships to carry its cargo because it didn't have nice, convenient, calm canals. Its ships had to be able to handle oceanic or near-oceanic conditions, even on Howell Bay, and so it began moving towards the evolution of the "Atlantic" hull types before anyone else . . . except Corisande and, to a lesser extent, Chisholm. Nobody on the mainland (the only part of the planet that really counts, right?) was especially interested in sending commerce around the southern tip of Howard to trade with the "out islands," who didn't have much of a population, anyway. Besides, they were all uncultured, ignorant barbarians who probably painted themselves blue and scratched a lot in indelicate places, weren't they?

Once that started changing, the critical maritime routes established themselves with Charis as the most critical node, not the mainland. It wasn't a case of Portugal looking for a route to the Spice Islands; it was a case of King Harrahld's grandafther and great-grandfather deliberately supporting the evolution of manufacturing (Safehold style) and then looking for export markets, first and foremost, with imports as a secondary concern. (And if you think you might see the hand of the Brethren of Saint Zhernau in there, well . . . . )

The blue-water sea routes people were interested in thus evolved naturally to connect Charis to Howard by way of Tarot and to both Havens by way of Siddarmark, Hsing-wu's Passage, and the inland canal system. Look at the fact that I’ve said persistently that Siddarmark is who’s been supplying the Border States and Temple Lands with Charisian goods. Essentially, Charisian galleons deliver the goods in question to Siddarmark, where they are landed, broken down into smaller loads, dumped into the canal system, and sent west. And the intimate connection between Charisian and Siddarmarkian trade is one of the things which has made Siddarmark even more deeply suspect in Clyntahn’s eyes since the beginning of the Jihad. In many ways, the Republic and Charis have been joined at the hip for a long, long time, and he's been absolutely right, from his perspective, to fear that connection. He's also figured it was only a matter of time before Stohnar openly embraced Charis, especially if Charis continued to defeat every Church fleet sent against it, which means the Sword of Scheuler was actually (in many ways) as logical --- and inevitable --- from the Church's perspective as he claimed. (As an aside, I don't really think he's quite as much of a total loose cannon as a lot of readers seem to think he is. He's definitely Not A Nice Person, and he Has A Few Quirks In His Gallop, but underneath all that choler and hedonism of his, there really is a working brain. That's what makes him so dangerous. Don't forget, when you're evaluating his actions, analyses, and responses that he has no clue about Merlin's true nature or capabilities or the existence of the Charisian "inner circle" he's up against.

The existence of the sea routes described above is the real reason very few Charisian galleons — merchant galleons — had penetrated as far as the Gulf of Dohlar until the last twenty or thirty years before Merlin's arrival. (Remember the Charisian privateer out for revenge on Dohlar for what happened to his father’s galleon when Charis was first starting to get involved in shipping in the Gulf of Dohlar?) There's also a reason Rahnyld thought he could get away with excluding Charisian "interlopers" from the Gulf. Most of the trade in the Gulf of Dohlar was carried in relatively small ships serving as the blue-water connectors for canals into Dohlar and the Gulf of Tanshar. What Rahnyld intended to do, as the biggest and most powerful of the (non-Harchongian) realms with coastlines on the Gulf of Dohlar, was to turn the Gulf into a Desnairian lake in terms of merchant traffic. Harchong, the only possible local objector big enough to do anything about it, didn't care who the ships belonged to as long as the bureaucrats got their cut of graft off of the traffic, so the only real fly in his ointment were the increasing intrusions of Charisian galleons carrying Charisian manufactured goods directly to consumers. (Especially in North Harchong, which — for various reasons — has fewer canals than most place.) Well, that and the fact that he knew that once he got outside the Gulf of Dohlar he'd be up against a worldwide Charisian merchant trading net that was growing steadily more all-pervasive and omnipresent. One reason he signed on so enthusiastically for the Armageddon Reef Campaign was his desire to squash Charis and (hopefully) supplant it as Safehold’s premiere maritime power.

Part of the reason for the Group of Four's concern where Charis was involved was that Charis stood outside the conventional Safeholdian model and was moving steadily further outside that model even before Merlin turned up. The Church understood the primarily agrarian, canal-based, low-tech economies of the mainland. It understood how Harchong worked, understood (mostly) the rivalry between Desnair and Siddarmark, understood what Rahnyld was trying to accomplish in the Gulf of Dohlar. What it did not understand (because it had no previous experience with it) was the emergence of a manufacturing-based economy (even in its pre-Ehdwyrd Howsmyn incarnation), trading with the entire world directly, using its own blue-water cargo ships to do it. Charis was an island, thousands of miles away from Zion and the mainland, where "all sorts of things" were clearly happening, and whose geographic and (especially) oceanic isolation from the Church's traditional power centers left the Church with too few levers (in the Church's opinion) to "manage" the situation. Clyntahn clearly — and accurately — appreciated that anything outside the Church's model for controlling and manipulating economies, restricting dangerous quests for knowledge (like the Royal College), and enforcing rigid, mainland-style religious orthodoxy constituted a serious threat to the status quo and, thus, directly threatened the Church's position of control. But he wasn't analyzing a pattern which had been in existence for 150 or 200 years — he was looking at a pattern which had begun emerging on a world level in no more than the past 60 or 70 years. A status quo, stagnant, top-down system whose controls and constraints have never been successfully or even significantly threatened in 800 years of recorded history can be just a little slow to recognize new and unprecedented threats, especially ones which grow as explosively (historically speaking) as the "Charisian problem" did. I've tried to make clear in the books that even though the situation that we see as of the Armageddon Reef Campaign is one which has obtained for many decades, it's still considered new and aberrant by men like Zhaspahr Clyntahn and that men like Zahmsyn Trynair are still coming to grips with the fact that the traditional ways of "managing" the secular realms don't apply to islands that don't share borders with other, potentially hostile neighbors and who are busy developing an entirely new economic paradigm, never envisioned by the Holy Writ.

In connection with the Church's tardiness in realizing what it's up against in Charis, you might want to think about how preoccupied the Church was with the emergence of the Republic of Siddarmark as a significant threat — in the Church's eyes — to the mainland status quo. The "out islands" were at best a threat on the horizon; having seen what the Republic did to Desnair, with what everyone (especially Desnair) considered to be the finest cavalry in the world, the Church was deeply concerned about what might happen if those same pike blocks headed west into the Border States. The fact that Siddarmark had ignored "hints" from Trynair's predecessors when the Church tried to whistle the Republic off Desnair didn't do a thing to make the vicarate any more confident of its ability to continue to "manage" Siddarmark, either. The fact that the Church couldn't understand why the Republic was determined to crush Desnair once and for all after 200 years or so of extremely bloody warfare which had begun with an unprovoked invasion of Siddarmark by Desnair may be another example of the Church becoming increasingly . . . desensitized to events outside its own ranks as the great Church dynasties became ever more focused on their own corruption and power seeking. As far as the Church was concerned, Siddarmark didn't have any right to seek redress against Desnair after Mother Church had said "All right, that's enough!" and ordered both of her recalcitrant children to go back to their rooms. The fact that Siddarmark didn't seem to understand that self evident law of God and the universe obviously meant Siddarmark was a potentially dangerous rogue state that needed watching. So Siddarmark tended to monopolize the Church's attention while Charis was coming up fast on the outside. And then, when Charis did impinge on the Church’s radar, the commonality of interest (mostly economic to begin with, but becoming steadily more pronounced in other ways, as well, by the time Merlin turned up) between her and Siddarmark only turned the two of them into mutually reinforcing threats in the Church's eyes. Which is the basis for Clyntahn's attitude towards both of them, if you read carefully.


(13) Do you really think I'm going to tell you whether or not ironclads — River-class or blue water — can fit into canals at this point?


(14) If the Salthar Canal were a river, maybe it could, assuming the locks themselves were big enough, but don't hold your breath waiting for it.


I'm going to go away now. Don't ask me any more questions. I have other things I need to do and you have a book coming out in September which will answer quite a few of them . . . and undoubtedly provoke still more.

Huh, So our dear grand inquisitor has managed to create Vicarate's worst nightmare? I predict an interesting "what has gone wrong now" meeting with the Group of Four.
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Re: MASSIVE SPOILER about next book hardware
Post by kbus888   » Wed Apr 04, 2012 1:33 pm

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I agree.

In fact this will not be the first "what has gone wrong now" meeting the Group of Four has had.

I believe the Vicarate's nightmares are about to go from "simply terrible" to "unbelievly awful" in a hurry !!

Myself, I can hardly wait to read about them [wink]

It will interest me to see if Clyntahn is powerful enough to weather this particular storm or will it take an even worse set of news to finally sink him permanently in the <Go4>'s eyes, (enough to see him finally deposed at least).

EDIT: Added Clyntahn's power phrase

?? Comments ??

R


blackjack217 wrote:
<big snip>

Huh, So our dear grand inquisitor has managed to create Vicarate's worst nightmare? I predict an interesting "what has gone wrong now" meeting with the Group of Four.
..//* *\\
(/(..^..)\)
.._/'*'\_
.(,,,)^(,,,)

Love is a condition in which
the happiness of another
is essential to your own. - R Heinlein
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Re: MASSIVE SPOILER about next book hardware
Post by lyonheart   » Wed Apr 04, 2012 3:44 pm

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Hi BlackJack217,

So do I!

The Go4 meeting that discusses the results of Schueler's actions in Siddarmark will be fascinating if it includes Duchairn (RFC) laying out just how bad the effects on the temple revenues are going to be, Maigwair explains the major military ramifications since Charis now has their mainland ally, and Trynair on the political aspects of why it was so stupid.

How quickly will the Go4 find out about the SoS etc?

Will Clyntahn try to present Siddarmark as a wholly internal civil war, that he had nothing to do with?

What will the other 3 do when they do find out?
What can they do?

How long will the news from Delferahk take to arrive at the temple?

It wouldn't hurt to have the reaction of the vicar in the street, or the rest of the episcopate to all this either. :-)

How safe can any leader or any country feel if Clyntahn can provoke revolution whenever he feels like it?

If the Siddarmark army was the most powerful on Safehold with just pikes etc, then arming a the remaining quarter with modern flintlocks ought to more than provide the equivalent firepower, while the new breech-loaders etc would easily exceed that, even against flintlock armed temple armies.

What size army was Maigwair creating for his expeditionary force(s)?
How big was big enough to take Charis and Chisholm, etc?
Not much, really.

Given the state of the Charisian militia, it wouldn't take much aside for very limited garrison duties since they plan on killing everyone, while aside from the ICA (if its still in Chisholm), the same is true for Chisholm and the rest, if they bother attacking them at the same time, which I doubt.

Does anyone believe Clyntahn would care if the temple expeditionary forces wore themselves down to nothing destroying the last vestige of humanity anywhere in the EoC, so they wouldn't return to possibly contaminate the mainland?

Given the arrogance of the mainlanders, they shouldn't feel the need to match the size of the ICA if it were still in Chisholm etc, so Allyn or his staff might think they need to just match the ICA, or an even smaller fraction of it.

A goal of an army of a half million would be smart in terms of training and equipping, which could be expanded if needed once it had been fully prepared, according to any changed circumstances then.

I doubt an army of more than a million could be justified to Duchairn as a separate force from the rest of the temple guard and all their obligations, though Maigwair and his friends might insist on larger forces for ego reasons.

Given a force of a million men, and the readjustment of regenerating the navy again interfering with Maigwair's plans to field the army, just how far along is the re-equipping of the temple guard army?

Paying for even a million soldiers is something else again as discussed on other threads.

Now Siddarmark could easily require orders of magnitude more soldiers to deal with it, which the Go4 can't afford.

The logistics of getting to Siddarmark have been considered on other threads, and while dragons may advance part of the army up to ~40 miles a day, moving and supporting a million men will be unprecedented in Safehold's history, so disastrous mistakes are bound to occur, without any help from OWL, Merlin, or Nynian deliberately gumming up the works.

We shall see in September.

I've posted before that ZC may simply smile and ask the other 3 Go4 members "so what do we do now?"

Given how they're tied to Clyntahn, and blaming him publically is all but impossible, the Siddarmark mess might only solidify his dominance of the Go4.

blackjack217 wrote:
runsforcelery wrote:
Lyonheart, if I wanted you to know all of that stuff, I'd already have told you, wouldn't I? You are, however, assuming some facts not in evidence and doing some misinterpreting.

(1) I never said that there wasn't a physical obstruction in the way of connecting the gulf of Dohlar and the Gulf of Jahras directly; I responded specifically to the question of why the Salthar Canal wasn't used to transport the Royal Dohlaran Navy in the run-up to the Armageddon Reef campaign.


(2) I don't know exactly what maps will be in Toil and Tribulation; I make suggestions and then we find out exactly what we're going to have time/resources to get in. The main emphasis in the upcoming book is going to be on the Republic of Siddarmark, so I would imagine that that's where the maps will be concentrated, and the Salthar Canal (and Grand Duchy of Silkiah) may or may not be included.


(3) The non-use of the canal wasn't mentioned by the Group of Four as proof that the Temple wasn't behind the war because drawing attention to it would simply have convinced people they had to be lying because their lips were moving. They'd already done everything that could be done to "prove" it was the Knights of the Temple Lands and not Mother Church behind all of this, and they weren't interested in drawing any attention to the "sneak attack" by pointing out ahead of time that they weren't using the canal. Since the allegations that the Group of Four was actually behind it have been floating around, they've chosen not to address the problem in part because they didn't want the fact that Silkiah was busy ignoring the embargo brought to public attention, for a lot of reasons. You may have noticed that they haven't said a great deal about Silkiah one way or the other — not publicly, at any rate.


(4) The city of Silkiah has been around virtually since the Day of Creation; the Grand Duchy of Silkiah is a much more recent creation, taking its name from the major city in the territory. The wars between the Republic of Siddarmark and the Desnairian Empire which led to the creation of the Grand Duchy began around 680, about 200 years ago, when Desnair invaded the Siddarmarkian province of Shiloh across what was then the unclaimed (and largely un-terraformed) South March Lands. There were several reasons for the invasion, but one of them was that Siddarmark had essentially turned the city of Silkiah into an overseas extension of the Republic, with local coasters transshipping canal cargoes across the Gulf of Mathyas to Trokhanos and Malitar Provinces. Desnair wanted the cargoes to go south, down the Silkiahan coast to the Gulf of Jahras; Silkiah didn't much like Desnair and preferred to deal with Siddarmark. The war between Siddarmark and Desnair technically didn't have a thing to do with Silkiah or the canal; in fact, it had quite a lot to do with it, and everyone knew it, but it's not considered polite to fight over canals in Safehold partly because the construction and maintenance of the canals are both enjoined upon all sons and daughters of Mother Church as religious duties in the Book of Langhorne.

At first, the Desnairian cavalry crushed the Siddarmarkian militia and army. By the time the Third Desnair-Siddarmark War was fought, however, Siddarmark had effectively reinvented the Swiss pike square and proceeded to kick Desnair in the belly and then dance up and down on its spine for the next fifty years or so. By the time the Church intervened effectively, Siddarmark had pushed south into North Watch far enough to be halfway around the inland edge of the Gulf of Jahras. This is one reason why everybody on the mainland has been scared to death of the Siddarmarkian Army prior to the introduction of flintlocks and artillery, and a huge reason why Clyntahn was dead set against allowing Siddarmark to acquire any of the "new model" war fighting technology. ("They can already kill any other army on the continent, and you want to give them rifles, too?! How crazy are you?!”) As a means of separating the contestants, the Church created the Grand Duchy of Silkiah (out of land which was still largely uninhabited) and specifically demilitarized the Salthar Canal. And by "demilitarized," I don't mean simply that you couldn't pass warships through it, but that you weren't allowed to use it for military purposes of any sort, which was intended to handicap future military campaigns by either side along the isthmus between Howard and East Haven.


(4) Did I tell you how big the locks were built? They're a lot bigger than any of the "animal-draft" canals on Old Earth were, because dragons can draw greater weights. You will find out all kinds of things about the canals, why they were built the size they were, whether or not they're still being built that size, etc., in the next book, and I'm not going to tell you about them now. Sorry about that.


(5) What makes you think it took until the eighth or ninth century for canals to become political objectives? This particular canal was a major contributing factor for a series of wars beginning in the late seventh century. The canal itself was not of enormous importance until perhaps a hundred years before that because there weren't any people in the vicinity. It was only as Trokhanos and Malitar in Siddarmark and the area around the Gulf of Jahras in Desnair began attracting large numbers of people that the Salthar Canal became especially significant, since it was never intended for oceanic transport in the first place, which meant it was basically a "local feeder" system rather than one with huge strategic importance. That doesn’t mean other canals didn’t have significant political, economic, and/or military importance before that time.


(6) Where did I say the canal is 20 feet deep? I didn't. I said that you couldn't get oceanic galleons, with drafts in excess of twenty feet through them; I never said that you could get oceanic galleons with drafts of twenty feet or less through them. Oceanic galleons tend to have drafts of around 18-25 feet; therefore, what I was saying was that you can't get oceanic galleons — period — through them, that one of the reasons is the depth of the canal, and that galleons tend to be around twenty feet deep, which simply means that the canals have to be less than 19 feet deep or so.


(7) I'm not going to tell you how wide the canal is.


(8) Yes, it might have been, but you couldn't get them through the thing.


(9) Desnair collects tribute from Silkiah; Silkiah is not a Desnairian possession. It is, in fact, specifically not a possession of either Siddarmark or Desnair. The tribute that it pays to Desnair was intended largely as a deliberate smack in the teeth to Siddarmark on the part of the Church when the Grand Duchy was created, in no small part because Siddarmark had . . . failed to note certain hints from the Church that Mother Church thought it would be a good idea for the Siddarmarkian army to go home rather than continuing to advance into Desnair. The tribute itself is pretty much nominal (it actually consists primarily of a requirement that Silkiah give Desnairian cargo passing through the canal a preferential rate), and it is officially justified not as a means of punishing Siddarmark for its hubris but as a way of compensating Desnair for the fact that it was not — then — possible to transport by canal from the gulf of Dohlar to eastern Desnair. It still isn't, for that matter, although there is now an additional canal link to the Gulf of Jahras from Hankey Sound, using one of the internal river lines, making the Salthar Canal itself less critical. Desnair still doesn't have direct canal connections between its northwestern provinces and the eastern portion of the empire, however, and the Gulf of Jahra’ canal termini are one of the big reasons the Gulf was so critical to the Empire's economy . . . and why the shipyards were placed predominantly there, rather than farther south.


(10) I didn't say Dohlar felt threatened by Harchong, Siddarmark, and Desnair; I said King Rahnyld can't expand because he's surrounded by powerful kingdoms that wouldn't welcome his intrusion. I'm not sure why you think Rahnyld's father might have been removed by the Church, nor do I understand why the creation of a buffer zone between Desnair and Siddarmark should be seen as a threat by Dohlar. If Desnair was permitted to use Silkiah as a militarily occupied province, it would be a damned poor "buffer" against Siddarmark, wouldn't it? You seem to be leaping to quite a few conclusions about who owns and controls what in the Grand Duchy. And I can't conceive of any reason why Rahnyld of Dohlar would have favored Charis over Desnair when what Rahnyld wanted was to try and build a merchant marine that would allow him to expand his power and his economy in the knowledge that overland expansion was impossible for him. Desnair is not and never was a maritime competitor to Dohlar, nor has Dohlar regarded Desnair as any particular military threat for at least a century or two.


(11) As I pointed out before, there is no 20 feet of draft available, so no one was going to build anything except relatively shallow draft, small coasters — or barges — to use the canals.


(12) You do realize how capital intensive canal building in a muscle-powered civilization is, don't you? The expansion and maintenance of the canal system is a religious duty, but when it ain't broke, you don't fix it, and until Charis came along, there was no international maritime trade worth talking about. You do remember what I said about Charis being willing to venture out of sight of land while no one else was? About how Charis got in on the ground floor of international maritime commerce? Charis had to build real ships to carry its cargo because it didn't have nice, convenient, calm canals. Its ships had to be able to handle oceanic or near-oceanic conditions, even on Howell Bay, and so it began moving towards the evolution of the "Atlantic" hull types before anyone else . . . except Corisande and, to a lesser extent, Chisholm. Nobody on the mainland (the only part of the planet that really counts, right?) was especially interested in sending commerce around the southern tip of Howard to trade with the "out islands," who didn't have much of a population, anyway. Besides, they were all uncultured, ignorant barbarians who probably painted themselves blue and scratched a lot in indelicate places, weren't they?

Once that started changing, the critical maritime routes established themselves with Charis as the most critical node, not the mainland. It wasn't a case of Portugal looking for a route to the Spice Islands; it was a case of King Harrahld's grandafther and great-grandfather deliberately supporting the evolution of manufacturing (Safehold style) and then looking for export markets, first and foremost, with imports as a secondary concern. (And if you think you might see the hand of the Brethren of Saint Zhernau in there, well . . . . )

The blue-water sea routes people were interested in thus evolved naturally to connect Charis to Howard by way of Tarot and to both Havens by way of Siddarmark, Hsing-wu's Passage, and the inland canal system. Look at the fact that I’ve said persistently that Siddarmark is who’s been supplying the Border States and Temple Lands with Charisian goods. Essentially, Charisian galleons deliver the goods in question to Siddarmark, where they are landed, broken down into smaller loads, dumped into the canal system, and sent west. And the intimate connection between Charisian and Siddarmarkian trade is one of the things which has made Siddarmark even more deeply suspect in Clyntahn’s eyes since the beginning of the Jihad. In many ways, the Republic and Charis have been joined at the hip for a long, long time, and he's been absolutely right, from his perspective, to fear that connection. He's also figured it was only a matter of time before Stohnar openly embraced Charis, especially if Charis continued to defeat every Church fleet sent against it, which means the Sword of Scheuler was actually (in many ways) as logical --- and inevitable --- from the Church's perspective as he claimed. (As an aside, I don't really think he's quite as much of a total loose cannon as a lot of readers seem to think he is. He's definitely Not A Nice Person, and he Has A Few Quirks In His Gallop, but underneath all that choler and hedonism of his, there really is a working brain. That's what makes him so dangerous. Don't forget, when you're evaluating his actions, analyses, and responses that he has no clue about Merlin's true nature or capabilities or the existence of the Charisian "inner circle" he's up against.

The existence of the sea routes described above is the real reason very few Charisian galleons — merchant galleons — had penetrated as far as the Gulf of Dohlar until the last twenty or thirty years before Merlin's arrival. (Remember the Charisian privateer out for revenge on Dohlar for what happened to his father’s galleon when Charis was first starting to get involved in shipping in the Gulf of Dohlar?) There's also a reason Rahnyld thought he could get away with excluding Charisian "interlopers" from the Gulf. Most of the trade in the Gulf of Dohlar was carried in relatively small ships serving as the blue-water connectors for canals into Dohlar and the Gulf of Tanshar. What Rahnyld intended to do, as the biggest and most powerful of the (non-Harchongian) realms with coastlines on the Gulf of Dohlar, was to turn the Gulf into a Desnairian lake in terms of merchant traffic. Harchong, the only possible local objector big enough to do anything about it, didn't care who the ships belonged to as long as the bureaucrats got their cut of graft off of the traffic, so the only real fly in his ointment were the increasing intrusions of Charisian galleons carrying Charisian manufactured goods directly to consumers. (Especially in North Harchong, which — for various reasons — has fewer canals than most place.) Well, that and the fact that he knew that once he got outside the Gulf of Dohlar he'd be up against a worldwide Charisian merchant trading net that was growing steadily more all-pervasive and omnipresent. One reason he signed on so enthusiastically for the Armageddon Reef Campaign was his desire to squash Charis and (hopefully) supplant it as Safehold’s premiere maritime power.

Part of the reason for the Group of Four's concern where Charis was involved was that Charis stood outside the conventional Safeholdian model and was moving steadily further outside that model even before Merlin turned up. The Church understood the primarily agrarian, canal-based, low-tech economies of the mainland. It understood how Harchong worked, understood (mostly) the rivalry between Desnair and Siddarmark, understood what Rahnyld was trying to accomplish in the Gulf of Dohlar. What it did not understand (because it had no previous experience with it) was the emergence of a manufacturing-based economy (even in its pre-Ehdwyrd Howsmyn incarnation), trading with the entire world directly, using its own blue-water cargo ships to do it. Charis was an island, thousands of miles away from Zion and the mainland, where "all sorts of things" were clearly happening, and whose geographic and (especially) oceanic isolation from the Church's traditional power centers left the Church with too few levers (in the Church's opinion) to "manage" the situation. Clyntahn clearly — and accurately — appreciated that anything outside the Church's model for controlling and manipulating economies, restricting dangerous quests for knowledge (like the Royal College), and enforcing rigid, mainland-style religious orthodoxy constituted a serious threat to the status quo and, thus, directly threatened the Church's position of control. But he wasn't analyzing a pattern which had been in existence for 150 or 200 years — he was looking at a pattern which had begun emerging on a world level in no more than the past 60 or 70 years. A status quo, stagnant, top-down system whose controls and constraints have never been successfully or even significantly threatened in 800 years of recorded history can be just a little slow to recognize new and unprecedented threats, especially ones which grow as explosively (historically speaking) as the "Charisian problem" did. I've tried to make clear in the books that even though the situation that we see as of the Armageddon Reef Campaign is one which has obtained for many decades, it's still considered new and aberrant by men like Zhaspahr Clyntahn and that men like Zahmsyn Trynair are still coming to grips with the fact that the traditional ways of "managing" the secular realms don't apply to islands that don't share borders with other, potentially hostile neighbors and who are busy developing an entirely new economic paradigm, never envisioned by the Holy Writ.

In connection with the Church's tardiness in realizing what it's up against in Charis, you might want to think about how preoccupied the Church was with the emergence of the Republic of Siddarmark as a significant threat — in the Church's eyes — to the mainland status quo. The "out islands" were at best a threat on the horizon; having seen what the Republic did to Desnair, with what everyone (especially Desnair) considered to be the finest cavalry in the world, the Church was deeply concerned about what might happen if those same pike blocks headed west into the Border States. The fact that Siddarmark had ignored "hints" from Trynair's predecessors when the Church tried to whistle the Republic off Desnair didn't do a thing to make the vicarate any more confident of its ability to continue to "manage" Siddarmark, either. The fact that the Church couldn't understand why the Republic was determined to crush Desnair once and for all after 200 years or so of extremely bloody warfare which had begun with an unprovoked invasion of Siddarmark by Desnair may be another example of the Church becoming increasingly . . . desensitized to events outside its own ranks as the great Church dynasties became ever more focused on their own corruption and power seeking. As far as the Church was concerned, Siddarmark didn't have any right to seek redress against Desnair after Mother Church had said "All right, that's enough!" and ordered both of her recalcitrant children to go back to their rooms. The fact that Siddarmark didn't seem to understand that self evident law of God and the universe obviously meant Siddarmark was a potentially dangerous rogue state that needed watching. So Siddarmark tended to monopolize the Church's attention while Charis was coming up fast on the outside. And then, when Charis did impinge on the Church’s radar, the commonality of interest (mostly economic to begin with, but becoming steadily more pronounced in other ways, as well, by the time Merlin turned up) between her and Siddarmark only turned the two of them into mutually reinforcing threats in the Church's eyes. Which is the basis for Clyntahn's attitude towards both of them, if you read carefully.


(13) Do you really think I'm going to tell you whether or not ironclads — River-class or blue water — can fit into canals at this point?


(14) If the Salthar Canal were a river, maybe it could, assuming the locks themselves were big enough, but don't hold your breath waiting for it.


I'm going to go away now. Don't ask me any more questions. I have other things I need to do and you have a book coming out in September which will answer quite a few of them . . . and undoubtedly provoke still more.

Huh, So our dear grand inquisitor has managed to create Vicarate's worst nightmare? I predict an interesting "what has gone wrong now" meeting with the Group of Four.
Any snippet or post from RFC is good if not great!
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Re: MASSIVE SPOILER about next book hardware
Post by Renegade13   » Wed Apr 04, 2012 9:17 pm

Renegade13
Commander

Posts: 244
Joined: Wed Mar 30, 2011 11:56 am

Hi lyonheart,

Nothing to disagree with there! Even before getting the improved armament you mention, these armored river-capable craft will seriously threaten any city along a river that is deep enough and wide enough for these ships to operate in. It is just that the 'threat range' would be significantly increased by the newer weapons.

lyonheart wrote:Hi Renegade13,

Given the 6' draft, and the propensity of cities to establish themselves on rivers in conjunction with land routes, the potential arises for the ironclads, especially if their muzzle-loaders are replaced by breech-loaders using cordite, the range of targets might be dramatically increased, and the prospect of cities surrendering to ironclad led invasions (marines now in powered landing craft :-) might be a feature of book number 7 or 8.

Feel free to disagree,

L
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