So you are saying the officer's did it? Weren't there any gay officers with a sense of style? I'm thinking hunter green leather and mohogany chairs with sudued greys and greens for the partition, perhaps an island/jungle motif ...and of course, classic white tablecloth.
So you are saying the officer's did it? Weren't there any gay officers with a sense of style? I'm thinking hunter green leather and mohogany chairs with sudued greys and greens for the partition, perhaps an island/jungle motif ...and of course, classic white tablecloth.
Perhaps I have overshared?
Alert! Dont ask Don't tell! Danger! Danger, Will Robinson! [:D][:'(][:D]
You served on Galatea? Did you serve in the Falklands war?
I thought you were a sub-mariner?
I did. I didn't.
There's no - in submariner and I was after serving on the Galatea.
Yeah, I know there is no hyphen, but it makes me grit my teeth every time someone [including many newscasters] pronounce it "submarine-er". I put the hyphen in so that readers would keep the word "mariner" intact.
No matter how bad a situation is, you can always make it worse. - Chris Hadfield : An Astronaut's Guide To Life On Earth
ORIGINAL: BBfanboy
Yeah, I know there is no hyphen, but it makes me grit my teeth every time someone [including many newscasters] pronounce it "submarine-er". I put the hyphen in so that readers would keep the word "mariner" intact.
Actually, I've read (in O'Kane's books) that the preferred pronunciation accents the I, since keeping the normal pronunciation of mariner implies that the guys are less than full mariners. What say the rest of you with modern naval experience?
ORIGINAL: BBfanboy
Yeah, I know there is no hyphen, but it makes me grit my teeth every time someone [including many newscasters] pronounce it "submarine-er". I put the hyphen in so that readers would keep the word "mariner" intact.
Actually, I've read (in O'Kane's books) that the preferred pronunciation accents the I, since keeping the normal pronunciation of mariner implies that the guys are less than full mariners. What say the rest of you with modern naval experience?
Interesting perspective. I took my pronunciation cue from submariners I met while I was in the services.
To me a submarIner sounds like a sandwich maker at Subway ...[;)]
No matter how bad a situation is, you can always make it worse. - Chris Hadfield : An Astronaut's Guide To Life On Earth
Assaulting units:
1st Motor Brigade
3rd Army Tank Brigade
3rd Motor Brigade
9th Australian Brigade
6th Australian Brigade
2/4th Armoured Regiment
4th Armoured Brigade
18th British Division
205th Field Artillery Battalion
I Australian Corps
108th Tank Attack Regiment
NW Australia Base Force
1st Medium Regiment
Defending units:
20th Division
38th/C Division
"Grown ups are what's left when skool is finished."
"History started badly and hav been geting steadily worse."
- Nigel Molesworth.
Assaulting units:
1st Motor Brigade
3rd Army Tank Brigade
3rd Motor Brigade
9th Australian Brigade
6th Australian Brigade
2/4th Armoured Regiment
4th Armoured Brigade
18th British Division
205th Field Artillery Battalion
I Australian Corps
108th Tank Attack Regiment
NW Australia Base Force
1st Medium Regiment
Defending units:
20th Division
38th/C Division
Yes, I'd say JJ is on the run in Northern Oz. Another division and 1/3rd wrecked. Look at the unadjusted AV for the IJA, 286. Isn't that low for an IJA division and attached regiment? Perhaps they were understrength?
So it is possible to push a large ground force up the track from Alice. Here is what we did. We built up Tennant to about 5K supply and then staged C-47's there to airdrop to the forward troops. That eventually ran out, but by then, Gove was built up to level 2 and we could fly directly to the trops at Katherine from there.
Also, Alice had about 100K supply. Some was undoubtedly trickling North but we never got Daly out of the red, even with no aircraft staged there.
JJ really should have been going after our ground troops at Katherine by air even before we landed at Darwin.
I think they are shell-shocked right now. No real counterattacks since the last cruiser raid at Darwin.
I will push down the rail line from Darwin to establish a supply link with Katherine. I would say we let the restricted Australian troops go after the defeated rabble and you save Br. 18th Div for your Sumatra thingy. I started Aus I Corps prepping for Sumatra...change targets if you wish.
ORIGINAL: Cap Mandrake
Look at the unadjusted AV for the IJA, 286. Isn't that low for an IJA division and attached regiment? Perhaps they were understrength?
Very low. Probably 1/3 strength for the Division, now probably at 20% strength after the retreat. Note the disruption combat modifier-almost assuredly from the aerial, naval and land bombardments.
Saumlaki: Just reached level 1 airfield. There is no aviation ground support yet but you can get single engine fighters to fly for a few turns without support so I sent in some P-40's. The galloping horde is headed back to Saumlaki to unload the dozers and CD guns and supplies. A USAAF HQ unit is flying in to Saumlaki to get some emergency ground support. The Air HQ units are nice for air redeployment as they have no heavy equipment. LYB bombers go after the PT boats at Saumlaki and are intercepted.
Morning Air attack on TF, near Saumlaki at 78,117
Weather in hex: Overcast
Raid spotted at 32 NM, estimated altitude 10,000 feet.
Estimated time to target is 9 minutes
Japanese aircraft
Ki-30 Ann x 4
Ki-44-IIa Tojo x 20
Darwin: JJ left 55K supplies behind in Darwin...and some personal items at The Virra. Airfield maint. is 100% destroyed. Seventh Air Force HQ and 4 Bn of SeaBees are headed to Darwin.
Dobo: The B-25's from Merauke are suppressing the airfield and the port to make it difficult to evacuate the IJA troops there.
Morning Air attack on Dobo , at 83,116
Weather in hex: Severe storms
Raid spotted at 20 NM, estimated altitude 9,000 feet.
Estimated time to target is 5 minutes
Allied aircraft
B-25C Mitchell x 3
B-25C Mitchell x 22
Port Headrand: This has got to be like being posted to the Eastern Front if you are in the IJA. Our last attack was 1:9. The LYB's don't give up easy. I wonder if they are drawing suppries from Broome? We could surround them but then the little buggers would NEVER give up. This is a typical day at PH:
Morning Air attack on Port Hedland , at 57,129
Weather in hex: Heavy cloud
Raid detected at 35 NM, estimated altitude 10,000 feet.
Estimated time to target is 12 minutes
Allied aircraft
Hudson I x 3
Mitchell II x 4
Bolingbroke IV x 11
B-17E Fortress x 5
B-25C Mitchell x 42
B-26 Marauder x 6
B-26B Marauder x 17
**************Bali Hai Club, Perth, Jan 7, 1943(c)***************
Man in fine linen slacks: <on phone> Yes General, I do realize the Emperor has only so many men, even in Scenario 2
......
Yes, yes, I quite understand, but our contracts only specified that M&M Intelligence Division would supply attack warnings for air or naval attacks. You didn't buy the premium package which includes land attacks.
......
No, no, it quite clearly limits our obligations. Don't you chaps have a legal team or something?
.....
I can recommend a firm, yes. I'll have them call you. Now, the Premium Package does include land attack warnings and strategic assessments but we are offering a special discount on our Premium Ultra which includes Counter-Intelligence services.
.....
Yes, Counter-Intelligence would include your efforts to discern what the Arries are secretly discovering about your operations.
.....
No afraid not, General, I can't disclose from where the Arries would get that kind of information. That would be, what we call in the West, a "confrict of interest".
In my opinion, I judge the time to execute the ground phase when the destroyed squads start increasing ... it is my understanding that ground attacks by air platforms first disable squads and then kill a few and then the disabled sqauds start down the path of destruction. One can bomb forever .. but I feel once I start getting 25%/75% results on comabt sqauds like 4 destroyed / 12 disabled like your non-combat squads results .. then it is time to start thinking deliberate attacks .. just my .02 ..
"What gets us into trouble is not what we don't know. It's what we know for sure that just ain't so"
In my opinion, I judge the time to execute the ground phase when the destroyed squads start increasing ... it is my understanding that ground attacks by air platforms first disable squads and then kill a few and then the disabled sqauds start down the path of destruction. One can bomb forever .. but I feel once I start getting 25%/75% results on comabt sqauds like 4 destroyed / 12 disabled like your non-combat squads results .. then it is time to start thinking deliberate attacks .. just my .02 ..
Hmm... interesting. This is like trading recipes for beer bottle roasted chicken or pulled pork.[:)]
****************Port Hedrand, slit trench, 08;45, Jan 7, 1943(c)***************
IJA private 1: <looks up into the sky. There is the drone of bombers> Ah, here come the ******* Boringbrokes again.
IJA private 2: I feer rike ******* piece of Kobe beef on ******* rotisserie.