neko said:In fact, the time it mentions the the word "rate" it is in reference to the angle and multiplier together. This would mean that a 2/45° ship can turn at a total rate of 90° per turn, which would then become 180° with AS&P.
Again, you're ignoring half of the ships turn rating. The turn rating of the ship is not 45° - it's 2/45°. This means that it can turn a total of 90° within a single movement round.MustEatBrains said:All stop and pivot allows for a single turn, of up to double the ship´´s turn rating. A ship with 2/45 has two single turns of 45 degrees each, which would mean that any doubled single turn would be at 90 degrees.
neko said:Again, you're ignoring half of the ships turn rating.
It does seem to me that a single turn of half the ship's turn rating indicates that for a 2/45 ship, you can make two turns on 45 normally, meaning that a single turn would normally be 45 and using All Stop and Pivot this would be a single turn of 90.neko said:Again, you're ignoring half of the ships turn rating. The turn rating of the ship is not 45° - it's 2/45°. This means that it can turn a total of 90° within a single movement round.MustEatBrains said:All stop and pivot allows for a single turn, of up to double the ship´´s turn rating. A ship with 2/45 has two single turns of 45 degrees each, which would mean that any doubled single turn would be at 90 degrees.
Put another way, a doubled single turn would indeed be 90°, but that is not what the rules mention. The rules mention doubling the turn rate, and the turn rate is two single turns. 2 x 2 x 45° = 180°.
Note that this doesn't make the whole idea redundant, because a significant number of ships have a turn rate of 1/45°. 2 x 1 x 45° = 90°. These ships take two such turns to do an about turn.
neko said:Again, you're ignoring half of the ships turn rating. The turn rating of the ship is not 45° - it's 2/45°. This means that it can turn a total of 90° within a single movement round.MustEatBrains said:All stop and pivot allows for a single turn, of up to double the ship´´s turn rating. A ship with 2/45 has two single turns of 45 degrees each, which would mean that any doubled single turn would be at 90 degrees.
Put another way, a doubled single turn would indeed be 90°, but that is not what the rules mention. The rules mention doubling the turn rate, and the turn rate is two single turns. 2 x 2 x 45° = 180°.
Note that this doesn't make the whole idea redundant, because a significant number of ships have a turn rate of 1/45°. 2 x 1 x 45° = 90°. These ships take two such turns to do an about turn.
Incorrect. I am only allowing one turn at double the turn rate. What you are arguing for is one turn at double of a single turn. Single turn =/= Turn rate.Jhary said:And you ignore the phrase ONE Turn with double rate not TWO turns with Double rate. What you Intreped is like i don´t turn for 2 turn then i make all the turns i didn´t used at once.