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Judge Holden 10-29-2013 08:54 AM

Pirates of the Visutula
 
I've finally wrangled my players into accepting Old Adam's proposal. Problem is I grew up playing this game when I was very young and probably having some very foolish notions of what can or cannot be done on the ol Wisla Krolowa in 'real life'.

So, my questions are:
Can I tow an amphibious vehicle? I know the barge gets pushed, but could you tow an amphibious vehicle behind the tug? Specifically the Canadian forces Cougar fighting vehicle (codename: MILF)
What can be mounted on the barge, large gun/vehicle wise?
Could you build a raised guard tower like emplacement on the barge?
How many tons of sheet metal can you armor up the bridge wheelhouse with before it just rolls over and sinks?

Cdnwolf 10-29-2013 06:44 PM

Ohhh great another Canuck...

To help you visualize the tug and the barge check out this thread...

http://forum.juhlin.com/showthread.php?t=3990

Targan 10-29-2013 07:01 PM

Steel-hulled tugs have a lot of mass below the waterline. I'm wildly speculating but I reckon you could easily have 10% of a tug's mass added to the upper superstructure without causing instability. In addition, the Wisla Krolowa is operating on a river, not the open ocean, so there's not much in the way of swell to have to deal with.

kcdusk 10-30-2013 03:58 AM

I'd say preparing the barge and tugs for travel down this hostile river environment is half the fun of the module!

What kind of ideas do the players have? Can they resource them in terms of finding the items, transporting them back, building modifications, holding back local scavengers, bartering for hard to get items, and any other timing factors (is the river rising or falling? is there an enemy force on the way that means the PCs will need to prioritise what 3 jobs get done ...).

Jason 10-30-2013 07:52 AM

Ahhh yes, outfitting the Tug is fun. I remember my players freaking out when they realized there were 20k rounds for the pair of Dshk MG's. There was a lot of recon by fire in that campaign.

I also remember a group that mounted a 120mm mortar on the forward deck because they struggled to get anything else. One of the first encounters where the tug takes fire from the shore and a character with low heavy weapons skill took a ranging shot on a sandbagged bunker and rolled a 1 (v2.2) Bullseye! Good times.

Adm.Lee 10-31-2013 09:26 AM

I'd think you could tow a Cougar, but I doubt that any vehicle is watertight over a long time, and it would need bailed or pumped out often.

I'm no expert, but I'm sure a vehicle could be put into a river barge, using ramps or a crane. I'm not so certain about it being able to fire over the sides, but if you've got the timber, you could build a platform in the barge to lift the vehicle high enough.

Per wikipedia: "Barges are used today for low-value bulk items, as the cost of hauling goods by barge is very low. Barges are also used for very heavy or bulky items; a typical barge measures 195 by 35 feet (59.4 m × 10.6 m), and can carry up to about 1500 tons of cargo."

When I ran this mod a long time ago, one of my parties was babying an M1, and I let them move it into the barge. (The main gun had no ammo, but the turret-top MGs were usable, and the threat of the main gun was certainly useful.)

Again, with timber and sandbags or scrap metal (plenty of that in Nowy Huta?), I think you could build a fortification on a deck on the barge.

Raellus 10-31-2013 04:54 PM

When I ran P.o.V., my players got their hands on a Vasilek automortar. It proved to be the ideal heavy weapon for the tug. It was compact enough that it could be mounted either fore or aft (or placed on the barge)- my group placed it on the foredeck. It's not too big and recoil isn't going to damage the tug's deck. It works in both direct and indirect fire modes. It can be fed from magazines or drop fed like a conventional mortar and it uses relatively common 82mm ammo. With HEDP rounds, it can defeat light armor, and WP rounds are great for creating an instant smokescreen or setting stuff on fire.

IMHO, the module gives the PCs way too much 12.7mm ammo. My group steamed all the way from Krakow to the Baltic and never came close to running out, even though I'd occassionally "lose" rounds or inflate the round count after a firefight. I highly recommend scaling it way back.

Another nice little weapon system for the tug is an AGL like the Soviet AGS-17 Plamya (30mm) or American Mk.-19.

Regarding the Cougar, I would think that towing it would swamp it. You've got a choppy wake from the tug's screws and dragging the APC at high speeds might run its nose down, making the swamping problem worse.

kato13 10-31-2013 06:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Raellus (Post 56808)
Regarding the Cougar, I would think that towing it would swamp it. You've got a choppy wake from the tug's screws and dragging the APC at high speeds might run its nose down, making the swamping problem worse.

The cougar should have sump pumps (the LAV-25 which is based on the chassis has 2), but running them would either require the engine to be running, or drain the battery. The barge could hold it easily, so I agree with the others, it should probably go there.

Offloading it without a crane might be problematic due to weight distribution issues. Might want to do that only when run aground or in very shallow waters.

It is so funny where this games takes me research wise. When the week started the likelihood that I would be reading Barge Stability documents from New Zealand was probably pretty small ;)

http://www.maritimenz.govt.nz/Public...guidelines.pdf

Judge Holden 11-01-2013 11:19 AM

Thanks for the help guys, I hadn't thought about the fact that the Cougar would get swamped or that amphibious vehicles likely leak a bit (this one has had an RPG through the side already so the patch job probably isn't the finest).

Thanks for the PDF on Barge Stability as well, it gives me some ideas for what might happen in a rainstorm since the barge is only partially covered with wood, and I imagine it must get fairly waterlogged when the rain starts to come down unless the Team thinks of putting pumps or something on it to drain the water.

While looking at weapon systems I came across the 30mm ASP which some light internet research revealed is a gas operated weapon. What does this entail -what type of gas does it use? I'm sure its' not gasoline, so I'm imagining metal 'bottles' like a welder uses. How often would you have to top these off?
http://www.combatreform.org/asp30bri...dismounted.jpg

AcesandEights 11-01-2013 01:12 PM

Maybe just a gas-operated reload via piston.

This 30mm is gas-operated in such a fashion, as far as I can tell. It may even be a vehicle mounted relative of your ASP 30mm.

Raellus 11-01-2013 01:24 PM

Right, gas-operated means that the gasses from the discharging ammunition are used to drive the function, as is the case with many automatic weapons. No external fuel source (other than fresh cartridges) is necessary.

Cdnwolf 11-01-2013 07:37 PM

;) Its Bean powered!!

Targan 11-01-2013 08:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Raellus (Post 56808)
IMHO, the module gives the PCs way too much 12.7mm ammo. My group steamed all the way from Krakow to the Baltic and never came close to running out, even though I'd occassionally "lose" rounds or inflate the round count after a firefight. I highly recommend scaling it way back.

I'd happily stick with the ammo count described in the module, but it's the Twilight War right? So one in every three or two in every three rounds fails to fire. Then watch the fun as the players try to decide which character/s gets the fun job of visually inspecting each of those 20,000 rounds and delinking the ones they think are duds. And even then there's no guarantee that they won't have constant misfires during every firefight. Good times.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Judge Holden
While looking at weapon systems I came across the 30mm ASP which some light internet research revealed is a gas operated weapon. What does this entail -what type of gas does it use? I'm sure it's not gasoline, so I'm imagining metal 'bottles' like a welder uses.

This is how gas operated firearms work: Gas-operated reloading. We also have at least one gunsmith on this forum who I'm sure is thoroughly well versed in gas operated firearms.

I've always found the American use of the word "gas" to describe petrol as being kind of odd. Petrol's not even a gas when it's burned in an internal combustion engine, it's a fine mist. I guess it must have originally been an abbreviation of "gasoline". Here in Australia if you have a vehicle that needs "gas" it would be one that runs on LPG or CNG. Way to go mangling a perfectly good language, Americans! :D

Bullet Magnet 11-01-2013 09:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Targan (Post 56830)
Way to go mangling a perfectly good language, Americans! :D

Hey, don't give us all the credit! You people outside the States already think we're too cocky, so why add to it? ;) After all, we're just part of a "global community" now, so we must all share in this.

kato13 11-02-2013 02:48 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Targan (Post 56830)

I've always found the American use of the word "gas" to describe petrol as being kind of odd. Petrol's not even a gas when it's burned in an internal combustion engine, it's a fine mist. I guess it must have originally been an abbreviation of "gasoline".
....

Way to go mangling a perfectly good language, Americans!

Actually it might be more proper to blame the brits (at least for the name gasoline)

Quote:

Gasolene was first used in an advert in the British newspaper, the Hampshire Telegraph & Sussex Chronicle in 1863. The first use of gasoline to be found in America is in an 1864 Act of Congress which declared a tax on the oil.
it looks like a corruption of Cazeline named after British importer John Cassell. A Dublin shopowner had a counterfeit version named the same, which when challenged he added a slash to the C (making it a G)

http://blog.oxforddictionaries.com/2...n-of-gasoline/

Judge Holden 11-06-2013 08:40 AM

Since I need to play the role of Old Adam: which is more logical for me? - to press on through the night and try to run the river 24 hours a day using spotlights and/or nightvision goggles and IR spotlights?, or do I play it safe and only travel during daylight?

If I only travel in the daytime do I try to stop at towns for the night, or do I park the tug and barge somewhere midstream and send ashore a landing party to hunt and such? Do I park it ashore for the night?

Of course all decisions are up the the PCs its their plans that will decide what happens - I just want to be able to provide some logical suggestions from that salty dog Old Adam.

Jason 11-06-2013 10:33 AM

Old Adam knows the river like the back of his hand, so I imagine he has some idea where it is safe to go ashore as opposed to sleeping midstream. I would not imagine that Adam would approve of trying to sail at night, which seems very irresponsible.

Raellus 11-06-2013 01:25 PM

Is wrecking the tug worth getting to Warsaw quicker? That's the decision that you'll have to make as Adam.

Travelling at night is going to be more dangerous. It'll be harder to spot obstacles. Using the tug's lights to mitigate this danger is going to make her a conspicuous target in the dark, another risk to consider. NVGs are a compromise, but if you've ever used them, you'll know depth and peripheral vision are somewhat compromised making it difficult to pick out obstacles. The monochrome sight picture presented by most military NVGs also makes it difficult to pick out subtle differences in terrain. I would think that this would be even more pronounced for moving water. And then there's the issue of eye strain from prolonged usage of NVGs. As a GM, I would increase the frequency of observation checks and random obstacle rolls if/when the party travelled at night. My players made the decision fairly early on not to travel far or fast at night.

The next major decision you need to make is what the local conditions are in the regions that the tug will be passing through. I tried to mix it up. A few areas were relatively safe, others were empty, many were controlled by enemy forces or bandits, some were home to x factor groups- neither obviously friendly nor openly hostile to the PCs. This created a lot of variety and kept things unpredictable which, to my mind is a good thing. I think that my players mostly enjoyed it as well. This will take some work on your part. The module provides some decent details on the game world between Krakow and Warsaw, but since I knew that a lot of my players had already played P.o.t.V., I made some minor but significant changes to the module materials in order to keep my campaign fresh and suspenseful.

To do determine how much Adam knows about local conditions, you'll have to decide how often Adam has travelled the Vistula in the months leading up to the adventure. If it's been a few weeks or months since his last trip, local conditions could have changed. A town that used to be safe & friendly might not be overrun by vicious marauders. When I played Adam, he hadn't travelled the river since he'd lost his last tug, a period of (IIRC) a few months. He could give the PCs intel, but it was by no means fresh. This gave the players some leads, but they still had to proceed with caution lest circumstances had changed. I played Adam as cautious and tried not to pull any blatant bait and switch moves on my group.

Good luck and have fun.

Targan 11-06-2013 05:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Judge Holden (Post 56885)
Since I need to play the role of Old Adam: which is more logical for me? - to press on through the night and try to run the river 24 hours a day using spotlights and/or nightvision goggles and IR spotlights?, or do I play it safe and only travel during daylight?

If I only travel in the daytime do I try to stop at towns for the night, or do I park the tug and barge somewhere midstream and send ashore a landing party to hunt and such? Do I park it ashore for the night?

I'd have a small boat scouting ahead of the tug wherever possible, maybe not all the time in the day but definitely at night if travel after dark was required.

Judge Holden 11-18-2013 08:10 AM

1 Attachment(s)
Sorry about the sizing issues on these deckplans im on a tablet and im kinda rusty.
This is what the team came up with. They traded a T80 tank, a flatbed tractor trailer, a troop truck and a nearly empty diesel tanker truck. All the vehicles were stolen from the Army of Silesia.
The chopper is also stolen, obviously from Krakow but it only has fumes left in the tanks.

Question - can an anti tank missile target the tug, or better yet the barge emplacements? Most of my knowlege comes from BF3 so i picture it needing to lock onto a specific target profile and water might mess this up?

rcaf_777 11-18-2013 10:49 AM

Can you post a bigger image?

Raellus 11-18-2013 12:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Judge Holden (Post 57055)
Question - can an anti tank missile target the tug, or better yet the barge emplacements? Most of my knowlege comes from BF3 so i picture it needing to lock onto a specific target profile and water might mess this up?

Absolutely. Wire-guided systems like the TOW, MILAN, SPIGOT, etc. require the missile to be steered to the target by the operator. All he/she has to do is keep the tug in the crosshairs and the missile will do the rest. Laser-guided systems too. Fire and forget ATGMs simply require the operator to lock on to the target, moving or stationary. If a Javelin can track a tank, it can track a river tugboat.

Judge Holden 11-18-2013 03:58 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by rcaf_777 (Post 57057)
Can you post a bigger image?

here we go

Cdnwolf 11-18-2013 09:11 PM

One little problem with your setup...

The barge is essentially a steel shell divided into four compartments
by bulkheads. One end is covered by wooden planking,
but most of the deck material has long since been stripped
by scavengers searching for firewood


If you remove the bulkhead you will weaken the hull structure of the barge.

I am wondering since the ZU-23-2 weighs 2,094 lbs. would that force down the front end of the barge too much when it is being pushed?

dragoon500ly 11-18-2013 09:11 PM

A 120mm mortar on the forecastle :naughty:

Just a couple of problems....and the big one is recoil!

Hull and deck plating on a civilian ship is simply not that thick, more along the lines of maybe 1/2-inch thickness...at most. It simply cannot handle the recoil forces of a major caliber weapon without a lot of reinforcement of the deck and hull structure.

Rockwolf66 11-18-2013 09:15 PM

Quote:

While looking at weapon systems I came across the 30mm ASP which some light internet research revealed is a gas operated weapon. What does this entail -what type of gas does it use? I'm sure its' not gasoline, so I'm imagining metal 'bottles' like a welder uses. How often would you have to top these off?
http://www.combatreform.org/asp30bri...dismounted.jpg
Well here is more data on it.

http://www.army-guide.com/eng/product3643.html

Cdnwolf 11-18-2013 09:23 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by dragoon500ly (Post 57071)
A 120mm mortar on the forecastle :naughty:

Just a couple of problems....and the big one is recoil!

Hull and deck plating on a civilian ship is simply not that thick, more along the lines of maybe 1/2-inch thickness...at most. It simply cannot handle the recoil forces of a major caliber weapon without a lot of reinforcement of the deck and hull structure.

What if he uses a man portable one? Less accurate of course... and isn't the power of the recoil in a mortar expended outward?

Targan 11-18-2013 09:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rockwolf66 (Post 57072)

And it needs to be remembered that although IRL the ASP-30 wasn't adopted as a standard NATO weapon, it was in the T2K timeline, at least by the USMC in V1. Personally I think it's a terrific weapon system and I'm surprised it didn't enter widespread use.

rcaf_777 11-19-2013 10:44 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Judge Holden (Post 56823)
While looking at weapon systems I came across the 30mm ASP which some light internet research revealed is a gas operated weapon. What does this entail -what type of gas does it use? I'm sure its' not gasoline, so I'm imagining metal 'bottles' like a welder uses. How often would you have to top these off?

In case of weapon systems the term "gas operated" refrers to how the weapons cycles through a belt of ammo. Some large guns like the M2 50 Cal uses recoil, ie the force of round going off to cycle the next round. In this case gas gas operate refere to gases cause by the round firing are used to force the bolt back and chamber another round. This is how most modern assault rilfes work.

Have cleaned guns that just recoil and gas recoil is perfered as gas operated tend to leave a lot of carbon on the parts which may lead to jamming.

StainlessSteelCynic 11-19-2013 06:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cdnwolf (Post 57070)
One little problem with your setup...

The barge is essentially a steel shell divided into four compartments
by bulkheads. One end is covered by wooden planking,
but most of the deck material has long since been stripped
by scavengers searching for firewood


If you remove the bulkhead you will weaken the hull structure of the barge.

I am wondering since the ZU-23-2 weighs 2,094 lbs. would that force down the front end of the barge too much when it is being pushed?

Barges are quite buoyant so in regards to the 1000 or so kilograms of the ZSU-23-2, it's not enough weight to push the front down. You can see these sorts of river barges in Europe with cranes, excavators or other plant machinery (many of them weigh in excess of 15,000kg) parked at one end with little impact on the buoyancy of the barge.


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