ORIGINAL: Buck Beach
.It is quite obvious that I have no business in this discussion with you do to your vast knowledge and expertise and my lack there of. This is said without sarcasm, however, call me stupid (even below an elementary school level) and criticize my anal reference to the games weapon diversity, I still think you have screwed with the CVO family OOB when it may and probably not necessary.
What are you talking about?
Why is it not absolutely necessary to get the gross overkill of submarines under control?
How is the separate die roll per DC mounting not a structural error? If it isn't, how could devices be modified so it worked?
If you roll once per DT thrown/dropped- you must risk multiple hits - when that is not the point of a pattern: a pattern was to insure ONE hit or near miss ANYWHERE in the pattern - and it spread them out to insure ONE hit - by which mechanism it insured you could not get more than one.
Why is CVO any different than BBO or EOS family? The same system is used.
I think you are being fooled by cosmetics: haveing a Mark x Mod y DC sounds very specific. But the Mark y mod z is not much of a change - and may be absolutely identical. [Stock, CHS and RHS had - until 7.9 - IDENTICAL Hedgehog weapons - except for the name. I said - why keep two devices that have identical performance? AK Warrior - showing he is quicker on the uptake than I am by some years - reported he came to the same conclusion - and was able to free a rare ASW slot effectively by combining them. DC are often very similar - and it turns out some of them should have been more similar than they were - poor research failed to identify that Japanese DC WERE RN DC for example. ]
Anyway - a small DC is a small DC - and the chance of a hit by a pattern of them is essentially the same - no matter which one you use. The big difference is what is the maximum depth setting - and we use four different ones here. But according to Naval Weapons of World War Two - this often happened in the SAME DC - it just was "600 feet, later changed to 1000 feet". No name change - but a performance change.
The big difference between DC is their size: USN used a larger charge - and could for that reason have a slightly better chance of serious damage or even a kill when a submarine was somewhere inside the pattern. Also - as the patterns got bigger - USN was able to achieve the same effect with a pattern typically one smaller than the small DC armed ships could (thus you see 14 small DC but only 13 large DC in the large pattern case). The cost was that it was harder to carry those bigger DC - and a risk probably absent from the game is that if they started to blow up on board due to battle damage (explosion or fire) - you probably lost the entire ship as the magazines go up in sympathetic detonation. [In a novel The Bedford Incident - set about 1960 - it is mentioned that a single pistol round can blow up the entire ship - and indeed that is how it ends - an officer does just that.]
What is it you want to see that you do not see?
Why is this not a significant reform?
And why are you expecting me to somehow be able to manufacture slots? We need the slots for patterns - this is a technical judgement but one that seems beyond serious dispute. That means they are not available for model use. And even if we went the old way - note we did NOT have the slots to give you French, Russian, Dutch etc DC. We were ALREADY lumping similar small DC together - and you just didn't know it.