Kor_Dahar_Master wrote:more from sb.com:
http://forums.spacebattles.com/showpost ... tcount=138
Is it just me or could they have just proclaimed his assertions unproven and moved on with the debate rather than pointing him?.
Some of those guys call people motherfucker amoung other foul insults for no penalty at all, but dishing out points, short term or even perma bans for MAYBE being wrong is just a bit excessive imho..
I don't know.
Insults are not always considered a problem. Some moderators even think they're called for when the other side isn't good enough or honest, so don't expect any consistency. Yes, the problem is that it's tied to your performance as a debater, regarding the quality of your arguments. And Ricrery1's is simply not good enough yet. His Star Trek bullet list was tiring, and the one he threw at the face of hammies on 40K wasn't particularly foolproof either. He gives too many opportunities to his opponents to bash him with his own mistakes. Besides, WR is a good troll, very good at baiting other people and getting out by making the other side look bad. Ricrery1 could have circumvented that by going for a K.I.S.S. post, but since he doesn't easily let go points he should concede, that would have not helped him much I suppose.
Plus he was getting stuck into an argument about mass lightening (oh, the memories...) and the speeds of Nova projectiles.
At some point, he even finds himself saying that the Nova shells in "Shadow Point" were fired at .25c, instead of 5000 km/s. That's wrong.
I believe someone pointed out in the thread that the same author used the high c fractional speed in his next book, "Execution Hour". But again, I covered "Execution Hour", and I know how it is thesame book that comes with that:
Execution Hour wrote:Combat in warp space was up-close and deadly, the range of scanners and weapons targeters so limited here that engagements took place at distances measured in hundreds rather than tens of thousands of kilometres/ The area between the two ships was saturated with energy as enough firepower to level a city was unleashed across it. Void shield strikes registered as bright blossoms on surveyor screens, and both ships shuddered under the impact of on-target hits.
Which Connor conveniently ignored in his own thread at SDN.
Just as much as he ignored this one as well:
Execution Hour wrote:Indeed, the captain of an Imperial Navy warship commanded destructive capabilities undreamed of by any mere Imperial Guard commander. Its hull-side batteries could raze whole cities with sustained orbital bombardments.
Execution Hour wrote:After the initial shock of the attack, the wrath of the orbiting Imperial warships would be swift and summary, and the reinforced rockcrete walls of these underground silos and the hundred meters of rock and soil above their heads would offer little protection from the sustained bombardment from the gun batteries of a Capital class warship.
All were quoted by him. Connor posted them, but then his brain switched off like if they didn't exist or something, as he didn't draw the obvious conclusions out of them.
But I'm sure WR would want people to ignore the whole of "Shadow Point", right? It's such an outlier, after all (sarcasm).
Now, getting back to the Nova cannon speeds and MLT.
This is a touchy subject, especially considering not only the variety of speeds, but the variety of shells (the most basic one being an implosion device that releases a blast with the yield worth a dozen plasma bombs).
Here, Ricrery's arguing about "Shadow Point" and getting lost between the speeds and the evidence of a required application of severe mass lightening tech, no matter if they fly at thousands of km per second or near c (of course, it's badly needed if they fly near c).
See, he even had WR admit that there were contradictions, which he could have exploited if he had taken some distance, but instead, since he was pressured to prove his position correct, he almost found himself having to pretend that there were no such contradictions, even if this position wasn't his but merely a strawman.
However, he's partially right in that the use of MLT would explain the different speeds: the near-c shells would simply have a much greater factor of ML applied to them.
That said, his point about the mass of the projectile heaved by slaves was a good one, and it's very similar to what I pointed
here about a macro cannon, where it says the cannon was heaved by fourty men. Heaving doesn't mean moving forward by merely pulling the object, it means
lifting it.
WR's point was that it was better to ignore "Shadow Point" than accept the existence of MLT on some particular shell designs.
Well that's good enough if you think the ships do hurl giga/tera/petatons with mass drivers.
I'm yet to see evidence that a Nova Cannon, the most powerful projectile they have, is actually that powerful. And anyway, he's quite stuck, because you *could* actually accepted the non use of MLT on Nova shell if fired at 5000 km/s such as in "Shadow Point". I say *could* because there are obvious problems about such a sudden acceleration applied to materials (a reason why the UNSC figures were completely stupid for MACs among other things). So Ricrery is insisting on a point that's not even useful. If you want to argue about the Nova cannon in a more efficient way, you have to deal with the cases of near-c velocities and observe their effects, because this is where there's a glaring problem.
Various Nova Cannon references were mentioned by hammies in the recent 40K thread, notably by Orsai. That would be a good way to start, by using the board's search engine and finding
ALL the references about the Novas.
Yes, WR was burying Ricrery1 under a load of strawmen as well, with accusations of modifying quotes, ignoring supposedly hard evidence, inventing or deleting sources. I know that by name, I've gone through the same flak.
And yes, globally, if Ric was more careful, he could have pinned creamy down. He could also completely cut WR's appeal to respect of rules by doing a bit of work and putting a link to the sources he said he had already provided, and then repeating them until WR would concede that said sources were indeed provided.
It's quite the crux of the matter here, since he was banned on not providing evidence.
Going back into the thread, we get to find WR's
evidence of Nova shells' super power:
WR wrote:The preview information from the Battlefleet Koronus supplement BTW, describes Nova cannon shots as " Having the power to scour a planet" Not particularly quantifiable, but nor does it mesh with the idea of having the power to melt twelve city blocks of indeterminate size.
How many shots? How does that invalidate the description from the published BFG rulebook? Didn't he say that contradictions existed? Actually, is GW's canon policy so absurd that everything is canon and everything is a lie or a myth or half a truth?
And above all, how canonical is that text yet?
The text is found here:
http://www.fantasyflightgames.com/edge_ ... ?eidn=1875
A bit of the page's text wrote:Even more so than torpedoes, Nova Cannon ammunition is hideously expensive, and requires purchase. In addition, the weapons fire slowly and have a fixed minimum range (too close and they could easily destroy their own ship). However, when one has enough firepower to scour the face of a planet, one tends to see such concerns as trivial.
While these weapons are certainly powerful, they are merely tools, and it takes a clever Explorer to use them to full effect. But what other ships, weapons, and tactics will complete your arsenal? And what threats await you in the corners of the Koronus Expanse? Keep checking back for more on Battlefleet Koronus!
We will wait to see what was quoted from the book. The last sentence clearly shows that they're talking about the book, not citing it per se. Yet, the last paragraph still begins with a formulation that *could* be from the book. There's simply no line drawn between what could be a snippet of the book, and FFG selling their stuff, basically.
So we'll see when the book is out to see the value of this.
Ricrery largely got banned because he couldn't handle WR's debating tactics, as simple as that, and SS4 didn't make any particular effort to see if WR could be wrong. With Thanatos allowing people to ignore Ricrery1, it's a lost cause anyway.