I have read these forums so much that I get in trouble with my wife. SO please forgive me if this question is covered elsewhere, I have done my best to find it.
I have seen posts about using the telegraph line and developing areas, especially in the 3 areas for the union with gold mines (development) and with advanced cities with ports and iron works (telegraph). I have never really seen much influx of money. My ships in the shipping lanes are usually bringing in far less than their capacity, especially when France hangs out in the box too.
Here is a short list of questions that also should help a lot of other people:
1) Should I send transports to the Carribean and over next to where France and England are on the map? (Top Right and Bottom Right boxes) will this help bring in some cash? Should I build new transports or save the resources by dispersing what I have since the capacity used shrinks when France occupies the box (i.e. using 2000/6000 capacity)? What about the Gulf lanes?
2) Has anyone noticed any specific monetary gain to playing the development card, clearing, and telegraph at the gold mines?
3) Loyalty is supposed to help right? Does playing Habeas Corpus in well developed areas like Baltimore and DC help? How do I get these big cities with factories to crank out more cash?
4) I usually average about $400-$500/turn, is that good?
5) Should I avoid printing money because of inflation?
6) I always make Iron Works first as I read that helps but I don't really see it...but it helps with WS
7) I never pay for conscripts because money is always my bottleneck, I always have plenty of conscripts especially towards the end... I know some cards don't work at all or only rarely, so I am wondering if I need to spend all the extra time managing this or just forget about it. Money is my bottleneck as the Union and I have not seen a huge amount of change since I started micro-managing things like this. But maybe I forget just how poor I was before.
Suggestions? I think this discourse would help a lot of people...
Your Civil War Friend,
Tribeticus