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Christopher Ross wrote:In conjunction with this, what is a reasonable time to expect a raw recruit into a standing army to spend training? For example, 10+ hours a day, 7 days a week?
How much breaks down into individual drilling, sparring, and demonstration?
How much does 'teaching ability' play into training someone: Would skill be more important than good teaching sense?
Christopher Ross wrote:How do you think weight would affect the protective properties of armor? For example, in firearms, weight can be the different between controllable recoil, and the weapon flying from your hand. Has there been similar notice that the weight of armor actually confers some advantage?
Christopher Ross wrote:I had thought that standing armies were just not in use,
Which leads to the question about training time: Is it still mostly individual practice if you have someone ready and willing to devote full time to teaching? Or might that need a sort of fourth category, "managed individual drill" which would be training while a teacher looks on and corrects?
As for armor, I knew that of course making it thicker or of better construction would help. The question comes from this: If you could have an armor that is similar in strength to steel, but feather-light (1/40th the weight, roughly) would it always be better? Or would that extra weight sometimes be preferred? Put another way, can armor ever be "too light"
Christopher Ross wrote:As for the material, I think I said earlier that adamantine is basically just under 4x stronger than the steel of the game, and is completely inelastic- basically it will suffer tremendous impacts, pressure, etc, and not give at all under it breaks entirely.
The point about the Romans reminds me: What sort of time would be expected to train a soldier to fight like that, as opposed to the sort of extreme individualistic skills?
Christopher Ross wrote:(As for adamantine, don't think too hard about it. We had a hell of a time trying to figure out how it's supposed to work. The best we've come up with is that the fibers are heated, woven, and then cooled, and the pressure from their shrinking allows them to form solid plates.)
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