ORIGINAL: rhinobones
ORIGINAL: ColinWright
Got any references . . .
What are your references? Ever been there? Any combat expericence? Got any references . . .
Regards, RhinoBones
Experience.
Moderators: ralphtricky, JAMiAM
ORIGINAL: rhinobones
ORIGINAL: ColinWright
Got any references . . .
What are your references? Ever been there? Any combat expericence? Got any references . . .
Regards, RhinoBones
ORIGINAL: ColinWright
Experience.
ORIGINAL: ColinWright
Got any references to units 'sheltering in wadis'? Common defensive tactic, was it?
Kind of funny. I've been in quite a few deserts. For starters, they are generally not 'flat, featureless, open.'
ORIGINAL: Curtis Lemay
Can't have a mirage without those features. That's why the roads were so important in North Africa: it wasn't that they were much of a movement advantage, it was that they gave a sense of direction in a featureless landscape. Otherwise, columns would soon be going in circles.
ORIGINAL: Curtis Lemay
ORIGINAL: ColinWright
Got any references to units 'sheltering in wadis'? Common defensive tactic, was it?
I know of examples of sunken roads being used.
ORIGINAL: rhinobones
ORIGINAL: ColinWright
Experience.
Please tell us about your "experience".
Here's a pic of the grand kid you hate . . . hope you don't have too hard of a time living with your self depreciation.
Regards, RhinoBones
ORIGINAL: Curtis Lemay
I know of examples of sunken roads being used. A trench is only 6-7 feet deep,
Can't have a mirage without those features. That's why the roads were so important in North Africa: it wasn't that they were much of a movement advantage, it was that they gave a sense of direction in a featureless landscape. Otherwise, columns would soon be going in circles.
ORIGINAL: Panama
Okay, have to state the obvious I guess. Compass.
If a column got lost it was only because of sheer stupidity.
ORIGINAL: ColinWright
In other words, you don't know of any examples of wadis being used in this way.
Yet you vociferously -- against all evidence and all common sense -- insist that is how they were used.
And why have you taken up this position? Because it is the position you took up, and you will never abandon it, modify it, or consider any other possible point of view. It matters not a whit to you that it is completely indefensible and lacks all possible validity.
And this is why any discussion of anything with you becomes sterile, fruitless, and pointless. That's repetitive, I know, but so are these debates.
ORIGINAL: golden delicious
There's an implied paradigm here: a deeper trench is better.
It sounds stupid but I have to point out that if a trench is 20 feet deep it is NOT 3 times better. It's worse.
ORIGINAL: Curtis Lemay
ORIGINAL: Panama
Okay, have to state the obvious I guess. Compass.
If a column got lost it was only because of sheer stupidity.
My comment was based upon SPI's Campaign for North Africa rules:
[8.46] Tracks. The major communication network of the North African Plateau is the series of tracks that criss-cross the entire area. The tracks are useful not in that they are easier to walk or ride in (in some places they are no easier than the terrain in the hex); what they do provide is direction - i.e., which way to go. Sense of direction in the "desert" is almost non-existent; the tracks provide that.
Whether units got lost or not (I think they did) is not the point. The point was that the terrain was particularly featureless.
ORIGINAL: Curtis Lemay
ORIGINAL: golden delicious
There's an implied paradigm here: a deeper trench is better.
It sounds stupid but I have to point out that if a trench is 20 feet deep it is NOT 3 times better. It's worse.
You have it exactly backward. It was Colin who claimed that a wadi should be at least 30 feet deep to warrant being put on the map. I was countering that notion.
ORIGINAL: Curtis Lemay
ORIGINAL: ColinWright
In other words, you don't know of any examples of wadis being used in this way.
I can't find any cases of wadis being used in any way...
ORIGINAL: Curtis Lemay
Yeah, yeah, yeah. This same whiny song gets sung every time now.
ORIGINAL: ColinWright
Reality? A pronouncement in an SPI manual? That's a no-brainer, apparently.
SPI are the same people who designed a France 1940 game where the Germans would win no matter what they did -- and then announced that this demonstrated that the Germans would have won no matter what they did.
ORIGINAL: ColinWright
This overlooks the detail (which I pointed out) that if one puts on wadis that are less than thirty feet deep, then you might as well use 'fill to border' for many areas of the world. Start mapping six foot deep wadis and you'll find it will be faster to clear the hexes without such 'wadis' than put them in.
The bottom line is that a shallow wadi simply isn't a significant enough terrain obstacle to represent in TOAW.
A deeper one would be far too deep to serve as a trench
-- and in any case, you've yet to produce a single example of wadis being used in this way.
They are dry riverbeds. That's what 'wadi' means.
Wadis that are deep enough to be represented on a TOAW map pose the same set of obstacles as rivers -- and are defended the same way as rivers.
We might as well have an argument where everyone else insists that helmets are intended to protect against shell splinters and richochets and things -- and you insist soldiers wear them to save their hearing. You can do just as well with that. Why not?
ORIGINAL: ColinWright
What you will find isn't entirely to my liking. Wadis were obstructions to movement; however, the piece comments that they only seem to have been used as the basis for a defensive line once -- and in that case the defenders actually wound up deploying forward of the wadi.
On the bright side, there are (not surprisingly) no references at all to wadis being 'used as trenches.' That really is a ridiculous concept.
ORIGINAL: Curtis Lemay
ORIGINAL: ColinWright
Reality? A pronouncement in an SPI manual? That's a no-brainer, apparently.
It's a secondary source, same as any other secondary source. My point is, I wasn't just pulling it out of thin air...
ORIGINAL: Curtis Lemay
ORIGINAL: ColinWright
What you will find isn't entirely to my liking. Wadis were obstructions to movement; however, the piece comments that they only seem to have been used as the basis for a defensive line once -- and in that case the defenders actually wound up deploying forward of the wadi.
So, let me get this straight: You didn't find any examples of them being used in defense either!
I had found a case of defending in front of a wadi. That was at El Mechili. That was because the town of El Mechili contained a fort.

ORIGINAL: Curtis Lemay
Your ability to delude yourself that you're winning an argument that you are ignominiously losing is one of your endearing characteristics.