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RE: Small/quick/simple idea how to restrict land based ... - 4/26/2006 3:07:13 PM   
JeffroK


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quote:

ORIGINAL: spence

One ought to look as well at the SRA/DEI Campaign. Someone already mentioned that the Swordfish and Vildebeests used bombs there rather than torpedos. I have done a lot of looking and found no instances other than the attacks on the PoW/Repulse wherein the G4s and G3s used torpedos. Reading about those attacks specifically I got the impression that:
1) the Japanese recognized a specific threat to their designs on the area in PoW/Repulse
2) they moved in certain air groups and then trained them up to make torpedo attacks
3) they provided torpedos for some of the aircraft (at least nine of the attacking bombers attacked with bombs).

Following the air groups involved I found no torpedo attacks by any of them during the remainder of the DEI campaign. Planes from some of these groups attacked the Dutch Fleet, Houston, Marblehead, and Boise at one time or another: all with bombs.
The next time they flew with torpedos was in the Guadalcanal campaign.




Trying to find info on a proposed torpedo attack on the ABDA Fleet but the newly occupied field couldnt handle it, Late Feb, early march 1942


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RE: Small/quick/simple idea how to restrict land based ... - 4/26/2006 9:36:42 PM   
juliet7bravo

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: Mogami

Hi, So where would the torpedo factories be and what starting size should they have?
(Nagaskai, SF,Karachi)
and then we need starting levels and locations.


My comments were addressed to WitP 2 or to an "WitP expansion pack". I really don't think mucking with major changes in WitP is desirable at this (very) late point in time. If they were desired, I think changes in line with the checks for 1000 lbs. would be more desirable, as others have mentioned.

If it was desired, I think we could come up with harder overall production numbers and extrapolate monthly production...


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Post #: 122
RE: Small/quick/simple idea how to restrict land based ... - 4/26/2006 9:50:01 PM   
Mike Solli


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Nikademus

At the time, where the 9 Type 96 bombers were based at Taroa (Chitose air group), there were no torpedoes available but they were available at Roi but permission to land there and rearm with torps was denied due to bomb damage. Like the Rabaul raid i see this as another example of ill preperation by the Japanese at that time. The outer defense perimeter was badly neglected during Japan's campaign in the SRA and shortly thereafter it concluded. Players are usually much more diligent and bring in enough planes and supplies to represent a formidable threat to carrier raids.


Ya beat me Nik. I knew that.

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Post #: 123
RE: Small/quick/simple idea how to restrict land based ... - 4/27/2006 1:06:17 AM   
el cid again

 

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An early form of victory disease was the Japanese failed to build up their Nanyo area (Carolines). They were believed to have "illegally fortified" them in the 1930s, but University of Hawaii research (See Nanyo) indicates in no case did they.

It took the Makin Island raid to turn this around. That raid probably made the later battles much worse. Had it not occurred, the islands would have been relatively easy targets.

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Post #: 124
RE: Small/quick/simple idea how to restrict land based ... - 4/27/2006 1:42:54 AM   
ChezDaJez


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quote:

Hi, So where would the torpedo factories be and what starting size should they have?
(Nagaskai, SF,Karachi)
and then we need starting levels and locations.


Primary Assembly Plant, Kure Naval Shipyard, Japan
Commanding Officer: Rear Admiral S. Naruse

Torpedo Research Facility: Kanazawa, Japan
Commanding Officer: Rear Admiral S. Oyagi

Individual parts produced throughout Japan.

Japanese Type 91 Aerial Torpedo Production Values by Year:
1931- 7
1932- 53
1933- 702
1934- 150
1935- 193
1936- 237
1937- 308
1938- 312
1939- 280
1940- 450
1941- 710
1942- 1200
1943- 1800
1944- 3565
1945- 297

These figures do not include the Type 3 or Type 4 aerial torpedo.

This data (and much, much more) is contained within the US Naval Inteliigence Technical Survey publication O-01-2 titled "Japanese Torpedoes and Tubes, Artilce 2, Aircraft Torpedoes." Also contained in this publication are the locations and capacities of torpedo storage facilities throughout Japan.

Chez

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RE: Small/quick/simple idea how to restrict land based ... - 4/27/2006 5:06:24 AM   
tsimmonds


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quote:

The point, of course, is not to prevent LBA from using torps, but to reward players for planning and deploying with a bit of forethought.


Exactly.

Wow.

Someone besides j7b gets it.

Thank you.

I feel like I'm turning into a pasternakski-esque crank. And I don't care!

< Message edited by irrelevant -- 4/27/2006 5:14:27 AM >


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Post #: 126
RE: Small/quick/simple idea how to restrict land based ... - 4/27/2006 3:12:03 PM   
el cid again

 

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In mechanical systems, I always produce torpedos by model number, and make players track where they are. That way they get no free torpedoes - but they get as many as they plan to have in any area.
I like logistics games - but I hear they are not popular. [Jim Dunnigan once wrote "no one would play a logistics game"] I would - and Joe says he would - and WITP (the original one) WAS a logistics game - designed by Dunnigan himself. But here we have problems imposing limits on the game design.

The Ki-67 was actually a torpedo bomber - and the Army air force actually had a unit named "the torpedo squadron" - trained to fly with the navy and hunt naval targets. I think it is a mistake to believe we have much idea about Japanese operations. The records were ordered destroyed - and mostly were. And Japan never kept records in the sense we did in the first place: they didn't have many log and record people to begin with. [An IJA division rated a full captain as a logistic officer!] A lot of what we think we know comes from testimony - and eyewitnesses are both invaluable and a source of error. It is best to go with things like 'the planes were designed for this weapon' - 'the unit was trained to use this weapon' things like that. I do not think it makes a lot of sense to say players cannot use the weapons they have - and we don't have real control over the logistics - just watch the printout!

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Post #: 127
RE: Small/quick/simple idea how to restrict land based ... - 4/27/2006 11:21:01 PM   
spence

 

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quote:

I think it is a mistake to believe we have much idea about Japanese operations. The records were ordered destroyed


Au contraire - we do know about such Japanese air operations as occurred for the most part. It is not particularly difficult to tell the difference between a level-bombing attack from altitude and a torpedo bombing attack. For a variety of reasons which may be somewhat obscured by the destruction of Japanese records torpedo attacks by land based medium bombers of either the IJN (or IJA= never? occurred very infrequently during the period of Jap expansion. The pace may have picked up some later in the war but aerial torpedo production was not such that it could support indescriminate or profligate useage of torpedos (in spite of a doctrinal preference for such attack) early on.

There should be some sort of limitation IMHO. The proposal to use various checks as Allied LBA does for 1000 lb/2000 lb bombs seems a very good idea.

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Post #: 128
RE: Small/quick/simple idea how to restrict land based ... - 4/28/2006 3:07:36 AM   
pasternakski


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quote:

ORIGINAL: irrelevant
I feel like I'm turning into a pasternakski-esque crank. And I don't care!

Hey ... hey ... HEY! I promised myself never again to say negative things on these forums ... but it ain't easy ...





Attachment (1)

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Post #: 129
RE: Small/quick/simple idea how to restrict land based ... - 4/28/2006 4:02:56 AM   
juliet7bravo

 

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That's why I (try really hard to) only talk to abstracts like "WitP 2". Some people like WitP, some people don't...

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RE: Small/quick/simple idea how to restrict land based ... - 4/28/2006 4:42:18 AM   
timtom


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quote:

ORIGINAL: juliet7bravo

That's why I (try really hard to) only talk to abstracts like "WitP 2". Some people like WitP, some people don't...


If one was cynically inclined, one might even get the thought that Matrix floated the entirely non-commital hint of a WitP II to direct critiscism of the game somewhere safe...


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RE: Small/quick/simple idea how to restrict land based ... - 4/28/2006 5:36:58 AM   
juliet7bravo

 

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If they wanted to deflect critisicism, they could give Ron S. his own locked forum and let him pick people for a "WitP 2 Alternate Development Team". Co-moderated by Pasternaski. "Keep your friends close, and your enemies closer", "Divide and conquer" and all that. All the whiners in one basket, LOL.

< Message edited by juliet7bravo -- 4/28/2006 5:39:23 AM >

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RE: Small/quick/simple idea how to restrict land based ... - 4/28/2006 6:25:25 AM   
pasternakski


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quote:

ORIGINAL: juliet7bravo
Co-moderated by Pasternaski.

I don't understand how you could possibly use a derivative of the word "moderate" and my online moniker in the same sentence...

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RE: Small/quick/simple idea how to restrict land based ... - 4/28/2006 6:49:10 AM   
juliet7bravo

 

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Granted, that is an unusual use of the work "moderate". I'm uncertain exactly what would be the correct descriptive word to apply. The mind boggles...

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RE: Small/quick/simple idea how to restrict land based ... - 4/28/2006 7:45:45 AM   
Belce


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Right now there is a requirement to arm subs in the game or place mines on a minelayer based on port size or auxilary on site. The same could be done for torpedo planes, either you are at a very big airbase or you have a specialized air support group at a base for it to work. The specialized air support groups could be the very large air support groups like the allies 270 air support formations.

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Post #: 135
RE: Small/quick/simple idea how to restrict land based ... - 4/28/2006 8:09:23 AM   
bradfordkay

 

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Belce, the game at present requires you to have a base of size 4 + (bomb load in lbs/6500 FRU) in order to launch a level bomber at normal range. Any level bomber launching from a smaller base must use the extended range load at normal range (and cannot fly to extended range). The extended range load will not be a torpedo, so this effectually is a base size restriction for loading torpedoes.

There are a few of us who believe that it should not be a base size restriction, but some other mechanism that reflects the relative scarcity of torpedo ammunition. I like any idea that rewards the player for forsight and planning in getting his torpedoes to the right base. I dislike any system that allows unlimited torpedo attacks all over the map.

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Post #: 136
RE: Small/quick/simple idea how to restrict land based ... - 4/28/2006 2:44:37 PM   
el cid again

 

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quote:

There should be some sort of limitation IMHO. The proposal to use various checks as Allied LBA does for 1000 lb/2000 lb bombs seems a very good idea.


Good only if you are a programmer with access to code. In that case I prefer to increase the complexity of the log model one level: I want to track

fuel (meaning ALL fuel - POL - including aircraft fuel)
ordnance (everything bigger than small arms ammunition)
general (everything else)

In that case, a plane will not fly without ALL three - AND it will need enough "ordnance" by weight if it is to carry a torpedo.

If you THEN want to have some other rule for 800 kg bombs and torpedoes, I have no problem. But until we have that level of modeling, I don't think ops will be well simulated.

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RE: Small/quick/simple idea how to restrict land based ... - 4/28/2006 6:21:07 PM   
juliet7bravo

 

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quote:

in spite of a doctrinal preference for such attack


I'm not so certain that's true anymore. I think we've all looked at that classic pic of the Betties flying in at sea level to launch torps at GC to many times.

The further you look at air-dropped torp usage, the more bomb usage you see. The only real major success at using the Nell/Betty in the TB role was "Force Z" that I can think of off-hand...pretty much the rest of the time the Japanese got (pardon the expression) "Jap Slapped". The use of the Nell/Betty in the TB role seems to have been "mostly" used against capital ships, invasion fleets, or when one or both was what the AC was likely loaded out for.

It obviously wasn't "all torps, all the time".

What's up with the near total lack of historical anti-shipping strikes around PM by the Japanese anyway?

So what was the deal? The relative scarcity of torps? Maintenance issues? Doctrine? Did the Japanese determine (correctly) that the Nell/Betty weren't ideal platforms for coming in "low and slow" to deliver torp attacks against Allied flak? The record would tend to indicate this wasn't the most survivable or effective type of attack. Then again, it would quite often require only one torp hit vs. several bomb hits to sink or do significant damage to the target ship.

Interesting paper discussing RAAF torp ops. Besides totally panning RAAF TB ops, of interest also is the problems with maintaining/supporting torps. You could imagine the Japanese had even greater issues.

http://www.library.unsw.edu.au/~thesis/adt-ADFA/uploads/approved/adt-ADFA20031029.102545/public/07chapter6.pdf

Pretty much, the air dropped torpedo appears to have had a very, very minor role in USAAF and RAAF (and RAF, IJA, JAAF ect.) ops as well.

< Message edited by juliet7bravo -- 4/28/2006 8:34:35 PM >

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RE: Small/quick/simple idea how to restrict land based ... - 4/28/2006 11:51:53 PM   
Big B

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: juliet7bravo

quote:

in spite of a doctrinal preference for such attack


I'm not so certain that's true anymore. I think we've all looked at that classic pic of the Betties flying in at sea level to launch torps at GC to many times.

The further you look at air-dropped torp usage, the more bomb usage you see. The only real major success at using the Nell/Betty in the TB role was "Force Z" that I can think of off-hand...pretty much the rest of the time the Japanese got (pardon the expression) "Jap Slapped". The use of the Nell/Betty in the TB role seems to have been "mostly" used against capital ships, invasion fleets, or when one or both was what the AC was likely loaded out for.

It obviously wasn't "all torps, all the time".

What's up with the near total lack of historical anti-shipping strikes around PM by the Japanese anyway?

So what was the deal? The relative scarcity of torps? Maintenance issues? Doctrine? Did the Japanese determine (correctly) that the Nell/Betty weren't ideal platforms for coming in "low and slow" to deliver torp attacks against Allied flak? The record would tend to indicate this wasn't the most survivable or effective type of attack. Then again, it would quite often require only one torp hit vs. several bomb hits to sink or do significant damage to the target ship.

Interesting paper discussing RAAF torp ops. Besides totally panning RAAF TB ops, of interest also is the problems with maintaining/supporting torps. You could imagine the Japanese had even greater issues.

http://www.library.unsw.edu.au/~thesis/adt-ADFA/uploads/approved/adt-ADFA20031029.102545/public/07chapter6.pdf

Pretty much, the air dropped torpedo appears to have had a very, very minor role in USAAF and RAAF (and RAF, IJA, JAAF ect.) ops as well.


So, ...have we decided to adopt my suggestion to introduce the same set of die rolls and checks on land based torps as we already do on Land based 1000lbrs?

B

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RE: Small/quick/simple idea how to restrict land based ... - 4/29/2006 1:18:40 AM   
spence

 

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Well I'm with you. Now let's see, that would make two of us in favor of the same thing.
Isn't there a rule against that?

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RE: Small/quick/simple idea how to restrict land based ... - 4/29/2006 1:22:11 AM   
Big B

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: spence

Well I'm with you. Now let's see, that would make two of us in favor of the same thing.
Isn't there a rule against that?



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RE: Small/quick/simple idea how to restrict land based ... - 4/29/2006 1:37:42 AM   
ChezDaJez


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quote:

What's up with the near total lack of historical anti-shipping strikes around PM by the Japanese anyway?


I think it had more to do with the lack of aerial patrolling of the approaches to PM. By the time Rabaul was fully operational and had sufficient forces on hand, the The US and Aussies had bolstered the fighter defense enough to deter the Japanese from patrolling south of PM.

Before the Japanese found a solution to that problem, the US invaded Guadalcanal and presented a whole new set of problems for them to reckon with. So the IJN put PM of the back burner and tried to counter our moves at Guadalcanal. The Japanese high command simply could not respond well enough to 2 separate threats and the IJN thought PM should have been an army operation in the first place and were probably glad to dump it into the IJA's lap.

Chez

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RE: Small/quick/simple idea how to restrict land based ... - 4/29/2006 3:14:56 AM   
tsimmonds


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quote:

ORIGINAL: pasternakski


quote:

ORIGINAL: juliet7bravo
Co-moderated by Pasternaski.

I don't understand how you could possibly use a derivative of the word "moderate" and my online moniker in the same sentence...

It would be used in the same sense that one might say, "Hurricane force winds have moderated to gale strength....."

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RE: Small/quick/simple idea how to restrict land based ... - 4/29/2006 7:25:25 AM   
Belce


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Brad I understand the current requirement for airbase size and LB's, what I suggested was that for LB torpedo attacks that it would need to be a base similiar to the requirement for ports to arm subs with torpedos or to have a special support unit present to do so. If you are at a lvl 4 airbase, any and all LB's would be able to conduct bomb attacks, if you are at larger airfield then they could conduct a torpedo attack, if you are a torpedo attack plane at a size 4 airfield and a large 200+ aviation support unit you can conduct a torpedo attack. The large aviation support unit would be the same as having an AS at a port for your subs rearming there.

I think that as the size of a base increases that there is alot of stuff being modeled beyond the size of airfield and dispersion area. A lvl 1 airfield is a large grassy field, a lvl 9 airfield has a few paved runways and built hangers.

I think that Mogami is correct in saying that the best defense against LB torpedo attack is careful play. One of the reasons for few historical torpedo plane kills was avoidance. One of the things that happens within wargames is creating situations for losses that would not have been historically accepatable. Commanders did not send people into harms way looking at their replacement schedule and seeing that in a reasonable time that any loss would be replaced. Those same gamers play and come back to a forum and complain about ahistorical losses when they have not followed historical considerations for losses and consequences.

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Post #: 144
RE: Small/quick/simple idea how to restrict land based ... - 4/29/2006 7:51:02 AM   
bradfordkay

 

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Belce, I understand what you are saying about a further increase in base size requirement, but don't completely agree with it. Torpedoes could have been loaded at smaller bases (were loaded?). It's the amount of torpedoes available that is skewed.

"One of the reasons for few historical torpedo plane kills was avoidance. One of the things that happens within wargames is creating situations for losses that would not have been historically accepatable. Commanders did not send people into harms way looking at their replacement schedule and seeing that in a reasonable time that any loss would be replaced. Those same gamers play and come back to a forum and complain about ahistorical losses when they have not followed historical considerations for losses and consequences."

I completely disagree. As already mentioned in this thread, Port Moresby and Lunga were both within torpedo carrying Betty range of Rabaul and yet there is on record only a very few torpedo attacks against the shipping that regularly supported these bases. Compare that record versus what you see in most WITP games. And I will wager that most WITP games have those bases carrying considerable CAP, probably more than was there historically (since nearly all aircraft in the game seem to be operating in higher numbers than IRL). I know that mine certainly do (but I do not exceed the air support level or size restrictions at my bases, with very rare exceptions).

Nearly every amphibious landing by US and Australian troops in the pacific theatre were within torpedo range of bases with Betties and how many ships were sunk? What was it, about 25 US transports? For the whole war? If our transports did not sail into Betty range, then how did we land on all those beaches?


In other words, "Homey don't play that game."






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Post #: 145
RE: Small/quick/simple idea how to restrict land based ... - 4/29/2006 8:56:00 AM   
pasternakski


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quote:

ORIGINAL: irrelevant
It would be used in the same sense that one might say, "Hurricane force winds have moderated to gale strength....."

Really? I was thinking more in terms of "what once were vices are now habits."

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So, I turned the other way,
And I carry on anyhow.

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Post #: 146
RE: Small/quick/simple idea how to restrict land based ... - 4/29/2006 1:31:49 PM   
el cid again

 

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quote:

It obviously wasn't "all torps, all the time".


Oh no - and anyone who thinks so has not read about Pearl Harbor in detail. We have torpedo bombers with BOMBS - and a major effort to make them effective. Torpedoes COULD NOT hit a battleship moored inside another - so they wanted to hit them with bombs - and see USS Arizona for the effect. Fujida worked this problem - he was a Kate boss - and came up with a new formation of 5 planes - each with a single 800 kg bomb - which could score almost exactly 5 times in 6 on a test range target. [That is, a vic of 5 planes had an 86% chance of scoring a hit, from its combat altitude, making a run on a target of the right size, which was not moving.]

Japan was big on combined attacks, and torpedoes were always only one element of the system. But - repeating for the sake of Spence - we don't know very much about air operations. We DO know that later in the war - midwar - the ARMY adopted the torpedo weapon, and formed up a unit to work with the navy in joint operations - which in fact was feasible since the Navy flew the same Army torpedo bomber - which in fact was better performing than a Kate or a Nell. [The official name of the JAAF unit is "the Torpedo Sentai" - see The Ki-61 in Japanese Army Air Force Service]. As always, these bombers were NOT exclusively torpedo bombers - although they were designed for that role - they were always also true bombers. When attacking B-29 bases, they didn't use torpedoes!

If you attempt to understand Japanese wartime equipment, weapons, tactics, and operational practice, you will run into some major problems:
there are problems getting any information at all - most of the time there are no documents to look at; if you do get documents they are very hard to read with comprehension. Japanese is structurally very logical - much more so than English (a compound language based on Germanic Anglo-Saxon with French grammer imposed on top of it) - but it has the most complicated set of writing systems of all time (Chinese pictograms - called Kanji; Japanese syllable alphabets - two of them - Hiragana and Katakana - which BOTH are used together in the same sentence; Western Roman letters - called Romanji) and it is normal NOT to state the subject of a sentence - only to imply it - so a reader must guess. Any time there is a problem with space (on a billboard, in an account book, on an engineering diagram) they use Chinese pictograms - which take up little space. These never have fewer than four common translations - and can have up to 8 more (according to my two thousand dollar ex CIA software). Add to this mix the problem that jargon - terms of technical art - for these fields has not been used for over half a century: no one knows what they mean or imply with confidence. IF you can translate Japanese to English for a business, you can get up to $3000 a page - and that without any issues of old usage to deal with. IF it were easy - if even spending $2000 for software like I did - would be enough - it would cost less per page. I put a child in Japanese immersion school, consult with native speakers who are linguists at one of only seven places you can do that in North America, and still have a very hard time coming to terms with what was meant. I used to have a neighbor - a retired admiral who interrogated Japanese sailors for the USSBS - when he was a captain. He said they didn't even believe what they were told - so they didn't report it. Later documents indicated to him that maybe they should have listened - but at the time it seemed preposterous to believe Japan might have been working on an SSN - or other esoteric things. Yet US Army interrogators in GERMANY found passengers who made the round trip to Japan in two months in 1945 - what kind of diesel submarine can do that? And other US Army guys - a beach patrol - found a Kaiten in Panama in July 1945. Not a suicide craft - a recon craft NOT in any reference. [This craft was long at the museum in Hawaii, and now is in a museum in Japan, so you can see it: not a warship, it has no warhead.] How did a Kaiten get to Panama in July 1945???? Not one submarine in the official lists could have been within thousands of miles of the place. There are lots of things we do not know. [This story was first published by Burl Burlingame in Advance Force Pearl Harbor. He is/was the curator of the aviation museum in Hawaii and had custody of the submarine. He wrote for USNI - but was too controversial to publish - due to a picture that seems to show a midget firing on a battleship - something we "know" didn't happen. Yet USNI has now twice funded forinsic exams of that picture, has three times pulished articles on it, and has decided to distribute Burl's book after all - he self published it.] I am not telling you what to believe. I am telling you there are big holes in what we know.

< Message edited by el cid again -- 4/29/2006 1:36:15 PM >

(in reply to juliet7bravo)
Post #: 147
RE: Small/quick/simple idea how to restrict land based ... - 4/29/2006 5:37:11 PM   
mogami


Posts: 12789
Joined: 8/23/2000
From: You can't get here from there
Status: offline
Hi. Since this is about WITP II I think everything should be tracked. I think the people who worry about torpedo attacks also don't mind micro managing if that provides a more accurate result.
I would ether build specific munitions factories or have the Japanese player allot his munitions production per month to specfic building.

Assign a cost for each type of munitions and on the first of every month he assigns production and on the last day of each month the new production arrives on map.

So for example we give Japan 100 points of munitions production.

Costs for
18in AP ammo 25 points per 100 rounds
18in Air torpedo cost 25 points per 10 torpedos
20mm AA ammo 10 points per 1000 rounds
infantry small arms ammo 25 points per 10,000 rounds

Japanese player allots
50 points to air torpedo
25 points for infantry ammo
25 points for AA ammo

At end of month he gets
20 torpedos
10,000 infantry
2500 AA

He then has to load and ship these points for use in combat.

This type system will also mean we need more accurate ship data since in actual event there were specific missions for which ships were designed that WITP lumps into AK class.
(food storage, preparation. Ammo carriers, Whalers,cannery )





< Message edited by Mogami -- 4/29/2006 5:40:03 PM >


_____________________________






I'm not retreating, I'm attacking in a different direction!

(in reply to el cid again)
Post #: 148
RE: Small/quick/simple idea how to restrict land based ... - 4/29/2006 6:47:16 PM   
bradfordkay

 

Posts: 8683
Joined: 3/24/2002
From: Olympia, WA
Status: offline
Russ, I'd still like to see WITP get a "torpedo check" in the same manner as the 1000lb bomb check. I'm not wanting to eliminate torpedo attacks, just bring them back within a more reasonable level. Even two thirds of the present number of attacks would be an improvement...

< Message edited by bradfordkay -- 4/29/2006 6:49:42 PM >


_____________________________

fair winds,
Brad

(in reply to mogami)
Post #: 149
RE: Small/quick/simple idea how to restrict land based ... - 4/29/2006 7:25:56 PM   
juliet7bravo

 

Posts: 894
Joined: 5/30/2001
Status: offline
I certainly won't argue that more thought needs to go into the production process. But, as you yourself have pointed out...we know what Japanese production was, and where it peaked out. We know, in broad terms, what they needed and how much. We know how much shipping tonnage was in use, of what type, and how it was allocated, for each month of the entire war. Modelling this wouldn't be rocket science. Once you know where production peaked, prior to be choked off/starved by shipping losses and bomb damage you can extrapolate their industrial performance when ahistoric factors come into play. Then you can allocate production.

Torpedo production is slightly different. It required specialized precision equipment and workers, and you couldn't just snap your fingers and change output. We know what actual production was, and where, for the Japanese. Why allocate or swag the numbers when we know the real deal? Use the real numbers to the point their production levels peak out, then after that base production on resources/damage.

We've (none of us) talked about anything but putting realistic and historical limitations on torpedoes, for both sides. No one has talked about playing historically, we've talked about "historic capabilities". A game such as this should be based on using "historic capabilities" in "ahistoric" yet realistic ways. The question is; "How can I, using what was historically available, change history?". When you inject ahistoric capabilities or unrealistic types or quantities of weapons, it becomes a fantasy game loosely based on reality. You might as well be playing MOO. It's like Honor Harrington space opera based on Horratio Hornblower...instead of sailing ships you've got star ships. But it still isn't the Napoleonic Wars.

To use your PM example, you're killing off more Allied ships than they lost in the entire war in this one extended battle, with a weapons system for which the projectile didn't even exist in those quantities. Using a method of attack in which the attacking AC's historically got slaughtered in droves with few survivors against even moderate flak or CAP. At a place which the Japanese never launched a single torpedo attack against, in spite of having numerous airfields in range.

- We talk about the Dutch "Uber-Floatplanes" using torps.

- We talk about the RAAF Beaufort (launched a grand total of 19 torp attacks IRL) and the Beaufighters (never launched a single torp attack IRL). The reality is that the Australians had a grand total of 50 torpedoes in storage (1942/43, and were forced to use the totally worthless USN MkXIII's. Yet in the game they have an endless supply of the excellent Brit Mk XII's.

- How about the RAF? While I know little of the RAF in the Pacific, the indications are they couldn't organize a Chinese Fire Drill in '42/43, let alone torp attacks or torp maintenance. From comments here, they (suprise) failed to deliver torp attacks in any meaningful numbers.

- Or the USAF/USAAC which apparently launched a single torp attack (Midway) in the Pacific using light/medium bombers. Yet we apparently can't using the PBY, which actually did, both day and night.

- Or the IJA/IJN who switched to (Nell/Betty) night intruder flights often using torps in the latter part of 1943 with some success, and I don't recall ever seeing a single successful night torp attack in game using the Nell/Betty.

- I can't find a single historical example of LB USN/USMC TB's (other than Midway) using torps, though I'm sure they did.

- No torp maintenance units, in-spite of convincing evidence these were vital to using torpedoes. Along with that is the inability in-game to cycle/stage air strikes through forward airbases.

To summarize, the air-dropped torpedo was not a "wunder-weapon" for either side. Understanding why they weren't, and how they could/should be is vital to a "simulation" such as this. With proper management, I think they COULD be a decisive weapon if the units were trained properly, employed correctly, and if you husbanded your limited supply of torps.


< Message edited by juliet7bravo -- 4/29/2006 7:43:28 PM >

(in reply to mogami)
Post #: 150
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