ArmChairGeneral wrote:I am pretty convinced that brownblocking is superior to blueblocking. You directly affect production in the blockaded region(s), and depending on which harbor it is you also add to the overall blockade % affecting all enemy harbors. On top of this you derive some direct military benefits (intel obviously, but others as well) simply from the forward position. Yes, you run the risk of suffering expensive to replace hits, but forts don't deal that much damage relative to the size of a blockade squadron, especially considering you have some chance of avoiding the bombardment altogether. Brownblocks need relatively small fleets compared to an equivalent effect achieved via blueblocking, depending on what you are blockading, and can often be established using cheaper ships like gunboats and brigs (although then hits become a bigger problem).
Absent sandbox testing showing that the average hits incurred is a greater cost than the effect you get, I am inclined to think that direct Union blockades of cities like Charleston and Savannah are more effective than putting the same fleet into the blockade box.
Straight Arrow wrote:I've been playing around with this idea of the CSA destroying the sea coast, harbor fort system and here's what I have come up so far:
A fort must be destroyed by a unit that is inside the structure and not in a stack that contains any locked units. The process takes 15 days. Anchorages associated with forts are not destroyed. Troops inside the fort appear in the now empty area. Locked troops remain locked. But, as they have artillery, the old garrison will rapidly dig entrenchments and will still be able to bombard passing ships.
Straight Arrow wrote:I'm looking for the downside here; would the following hold true? Ammo production would drop, entrenched defending forces would be forced to retreat much easier, some existing garrisons would be stranded in areas that no longer had a supply source, and perhaps worst of all, this is gamey to the max and totally unhistorical.
On the upside: you no longer have to worry about defending the area and can concentrate forces where they count, cites would not be easily blockaded by captured forts, the Federals would no longer have targets that yield a secure and cheaply defended costal base, and perhaps most important of all, the Union would not have captured a point that pulls supply. They will now be forced to create a supply network from scratch by building a depot or capturing a size 3+, coastal city.
What say you?
DrPostman wrote:See how it effects your income.
GraniteStater wrote:You want facts? The entire industrial production of the South in 1860 was one-third of New York (the state). There's a little old river mill in Rollinsford, NH, about five miles from me, that produced 1/4 of all blankets for the US Army in the war. That's one mill in one small town in New Hampshire.
Shelby Foote: "The North fought that war with one arm tied behind its back. Harvard students were sculling on the Charles in 1864. If the South had won more victories - and I mean a lot more - the North would have taken that other arm out. They really had no chance to win that war."
GraniteStater wrote:Thats not a fact, thats invented fiction.
I truly don't care for this characterization, sir. I don't make things up to make points. FYI, I have read that statement about the comparison to NY State, and others very similar to it, in more than a few sources.
I just heard it stated once in a documentary that Rollinsford did that. If you're up on the Salmon Falls Mfg. Co., well, good.
The New York quote concerns industrial production, not selling cotton. The southern 'industrial base' was small, at best. There are ample facts and figures on the subject - the only real contribution to US GDP in the antebellum South was the sale of agricultural goods.
That's a fact.
GraniteStater wrote:From your rather discourteous addresses in a history thread (and this is not a history thread, any extended discussions should be in that forum, not here), I see that you are politeness-challenged.
If you wish to go to the other forum, I'll do my best to point out to you that the southern slave-holding states were industrially challenged, by leaps and bounds. Other than that, good luck, because you might need it with the mods if you keep this up.
GraniteStater wrote:For the record, I'm not the one who cast aspersions on someone else's learning, educational background, etc.
Now, enough. We don't conduct ourselves like this around here.
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