jaw
Posts: 1045
Joined: 7/24/2009 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Beetle In the spirit of trying to keep the Q&A section to Q&A - could you tell me the thougth process behind only having the production go down from historical levels? My logic (which may flawed) is that either external forces hindered production (i.e. your example of factories being bombed) or the production being siphoned off (i.e. another front needing the production). However, the other side could be argued...(factories being built, or other commands encountering success). Could you please provide a little insight into this thought? Personnally, I would love to see you guys let the production be in excess or less than historical levels based on the difficulty level. Thanks for the hard work. To be technically accurate production can go both up or down compared to historical but it is difficult to get it to go up and difficult to get it to go down. To exceed historical production (and remember we are only talking about aircraft and AFVs) you have to not move a factory that was historically moved. For example, if you are confident that you can hold Leningrad and you leave all the Leningrad factories in place, you will get more production of what was being produced at those factories when they were historically moved (no production disruption from moving). If you leave the factories in Leningrad and you lose the city you will lose the subsequent production of those factories for the rest of the War. It is also possible, but not very effective, to strategically bomb factories in an effort to damage them. The Germans have a limited strategic bombing capability at the beginning of the War but there is almost always something more important to do with those planes than strategic bombing. The Russians also have a strategic bombing capability but without air superiority it will be many months, if not years, before they can fly a strategic bombing mission with a reasonable chance of success; by that time the Russians will also have better things to do with their aircraft than bomb German factories, the bombing of which by the Allied Combined Bomber Offensive is already factored into the production system. Given that in theory there is more than enough time and rail capacity to duplicate the historical factory evacuation and minimal chance of serious disruption from bombing, a fixed production system better simulates the actual capabilities of the respective war economies than any "free production" system would without an enormous amount of restrictive coding to prevent odd ball production distortions (the old switch all tank production to Panthers).
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