M J Dougherty
Mongoose
There's probably some of my stuff not on there, but I can't think of anything offhand.
steve98052 said:. . .
It also might be nice to have the In Design templates saved in Scribus format too; hobbyist writers don't usually want to spend $20 per month for desktop publishing software they rarely use. But if templates don't readily save-as, I suppose we can just look at published Mongoose books and follow their style, or use their own style.
OK, I'm downloading a seven-day trial version of In Design. My oh my, it's a slow download. And if I ever need to open another In Design document beyond the seven days, I'll have to pay up. But at least I'll have that TAS template in Scribus format, assuming I can figure out enough about In Design to export the template elements, and create a Scribus template from them. Maybe I'll also do a Word template, in case Scribus feels like overkill.MonkeyX said:I second a Scribus template. I use it for all my layout work and if it were available a few Traveller may actually be on the horizon.
HalC said:How long does it take to match courses and vectors with a prey ship?
We NEED a how to guide - involving sensor rules detecting ships and the like.
We need to know how long it takes for a ship in its berth not actively geared for battle stations - perhaps with its crew about under normal conditions, suddenly having to return to ship and attain battle stations in preparation for chasing after a situation.
Moppy said:HalC said:How long does it take to match courses and vectors with a prey ship?
We NEED a how to guide - involving sensor rules detecting ships and the like.
We need to know how long it takes for a ship in its berth not actively geared for battle stations - perhaps with its crew about under normal conditions, suddenly having to return to ship and attain battle stations in preparation for chasing after a situation.
The first 2 are in Mongoose including High Guard.
For the second, you can probably use current time scales. When Pearl Harbor was attacked, the USN was able to get some active battleships underway within 30 minutes.
Navy ships still maintain a watch, even when at civilian ports. They don't want another USS Cole.
If they have to leave in a hurry, the navy will of course send an air/raft round to the local bars to pick up anyone who might be ashore.
It can take up to 2 weeks or more if the ship has been laid up for a while but I don't think this was the question you asked.
HalC said:Hi Moppy,
Would have tried to send you a more private comment - but it appears that option is not available SOOOooooo...
AndrewW said:HalC said:Hi Moppy,
Would have tried to send you a more private comment - but it appears that option is not available SOOOooooo...
You can click on the user name then under Contact you'll see PM: Send private message, just click there.
Moppy said:AndrewW said:HalC said:Hi Moppy,
Would have tried to send you a more private comment - but it appears that option is not available SOOOooooo...
You can click on the user name then under Contact you'll see PM: Send private message, just click there.
I have that disabled. I don't know if that works, but I've not yet received a message.
Moppy said:In my experience the only people that really want guidelines for this are the type that will throw them out and make their own because "X wont work, Y won't work, Z is stupid" exactly like the battleships at pearl harbor example - it's a lot of work for no gain.
If you're playing a wargame it's necessary but Traveller isn't really the best wargame framework.
Many of the issues are also political and not military. Can USS Cole happen again? Theoretically no if you let them sink anything they see. Who will let them do this in peacetime?
Interesting question. I would agree that it's an Admin roll to have at least some effective crew at ready on all shifts.HalC said:. . . A poor crew will tend to respond more slowly or incorrectly to events, whereas a crack crew will be sharp and on the ball, leaving little margin of error to be exploited by any potential enemies. Something as simple as an Admin roll to insure that when the flag goes up, the crews are on hand and ready to engage the enemy might be worth introducing into the game. Maybe it isn't admin that determines a readiness state - perhaps it is a leadership roll. Who knows?
. . .
Rikki Tikki Traveller said:I suspect that any System Defense Force will have multiple ships in a variety of readiness status.
For Example, the fleet has 4 System Defense Boats:
1 is on Active status - flying around, checking papers etc. within the 100D limit
1 is on Standby status - the ship is in port, docked etc. but could be active and flying within an hour - crews are aboard ship, but the ship is mostly shut down
1 is on Reserve status - the ship would take a day to get underway, up to 2/3 of the crew is not aboard ship
1 is in Maintenance status - it could not get underway for at least a week - major components are off-line, unavailable.
Modern US Air Force has as much as 50% of its fighters unable to be rapidly deployed (respond to an emergency) due to maintenance or crew issues.
Just some thoughts...