ColinWright
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Joined: 10/13/2005 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Curtis Lemay quote:
ORIGINAL: ColinWright Finally, it's a bit disappointing that the new supply rules effectively eviscerate supply units. They've gone from being a tool that can effectively double supply in some situations to one that merely extends the supply radius a bit, if I read the description aright. Supply units are not and never were supply sources. Rather they represent independent supply transport assets. Specifically, enough to increase the number of supply vehicles in the supply column by 25%. As such, the lift to supply is dependent upon how far from the supply source the destination is at. If you add 1,000 trucks to a supply line that is 50 km long it has much more effect (in gross supply delivered) than if you add 1,000 trucks to a supply line that is 1000 km long. So you say. I say they represent a concentration of logistical effort -- whether trucks, planes, mule teams, shipping, or simply available supplies.quote:
So, it was done for realism purposes. New supply is an attempt to increase realism. Had the supply unit boost been independent of distance, that would have been a hit to realism. Again, so you say. One could also argue they represent a concentrated effort get supplies up to a certain area in spite of logistical obstacles.quote:
Some day, we, hopefully, may have the ability to amalgamate the effects of multiple supply units. Then there can be greater support applied. But it will still be dependent upon distance from supply source. Indeed, and this was already the case. Supply units couldn't put you in full supply -- just ameliorate the consequences of being in very poor supply. At the end of the day, the change takes a fairly useful tool in the designer's armory and eviscerates it -- apparently because of a conception of supply as simply a matter of 'trucks' rather than as a more generalized simulation of a concentration of effort and resources in general. The first application of supply units in a disc scenario was some Austro-Hungarian 'attack Serbia or fight Russia' thing. It was set in 1914, and I doubt if the supply unit was supposed to represent 'trucks' in particular. It would seem that it was simply intended to reflect where Austria would place the weight of her effort -- be that in the form of trucks, wagon trains, available munitions, or hectoring letters from Vienna. This is how I've always conceived of the things, and it is treated in this way that they make a useful tool. I don't think deciding that they represent masses of trucks in particular really improves matters. Rommel is at the end of a tortuous supply line where he is demanding scarce resources that will have to be brought over rail, sea, road, and/or air with considerable loss. The Axis player moves his supply unit to him rather than sending it with Armeegruppe A into the Caucasus. Is it trucks? Is it Italian tankers? Is it Ju-52's airlifting stuff from Crete? None of the above, really. It's simply where the effort goes. As another example, I use 'supply units' in Seelowe. They pop up at any airfield the German takes. Now, they're not representing trucks here -- they're representing Ju-52's. And I don't want the supply net extended -- if anything, I want it concentrated around the airfields where the Ju-52's are landing. After all, in this case, the supply units hardly represent 'trucks.' They represent cases of MG 34 ammunition and mortar shells piling up at the strip ten kilometers off. Send some guys and carry them back...better than hoofing it to Dover, right? You're a long way from an airstrip, you're in that much worse straits. Point is, supply units are an optional tool that doesn't really represent any one thing in particular. Depending on the situation, they could represent almost anything. Seeing them as 'trucks' is simply a restriction of their meaning that robs them of much of their utility. It is also, I might point out, a consequence of making changes without sufficient discussion. After all, it's not that your vision of supply units is flawed so much as that it's not the only possible vision.
< Message edited by ColinWright -- 5/1/2011 8:28:28 PM >
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