If anything, this will serve as another example of the phenomenon that turned WH4K into W4NK in versus debates.
Shall we start?
Connor MacLeod wrote: Page 14Interesting that Honsou is aiming for a gap in the armour with his bolt pistol, because it implies that he knew the bolt round might have been either stopped or reduced in force if it hit either.Honsou sighted on the soldier nearest him, lining the fore and back sight precisely on the gap between the man's helmet and flak jacket.
Also, this bolt pistol seems to use good ol fashioned fixed sights. Not neccsearily a problem, at least not for a space marine.
Notice, above all, the absence of description of pretty much anything save for the missing heads. Steam? Foul smell? Flashes due to the sudden release of heat? Pulverized bits of flesh and pulped tissue? Any deafening explosion?Connor MacLeod wrote: PAge 15Bolt pistol round's effects, basically blowing the heads apart. Note that they hit at the neck, so the explosive radius would have been over ~15-20 cm. Even more, note the apparent lack of blood gushing out of the neck (or apparent absence of blood spraying around for that matter. This would imply significant cauterization occuring. Given probable head sizes, and say fairly low level cauterization (150-200C, about half what I do for lasguns.. ~400-580 kilojoules/kg roughly), we're rpobably looking at the energy equivalent of 1-2 kilos of TNT, at least (thermal effects only, not explosive)He swore, seeing Hitch and Charedo slump to the ground, gaping craters where their faces had been.
...
He grabbed Hitche's headless corpse and pulled, hauling his former squadmate inside, ,out of the door's path.
Nothing. Why focus on non described cauterization then?
Not to say that the figure presented to support cauterization is most absurd. How can it be that a bolt projectile which yield, a fraction of which being heat, didn't actually blow the torso?
You know, like you would actually expect after lodging one or two kilos of TNT right inside the nape of a man?
Here's a M67 grenade. About 180 g of Composition B, which is 59.5% RDX and 39.5% TNT. Let's just make that 60 and 40 percent, and thus respectively 108 g and 72 g. With RDX giving around 5.2 MJ/kg and TNT giving 4.2 MJ/kg, we get 0.5616 MJ and 0.3024 MJ.
That's about 0.864 MJ.
Now that is what the frag grenade does. Notice the distance, more than ten meters easily, the amount of earth it lifts and the radius of the affected soil.
Now tell me that amount of firepower directly lodged into the exposed nape of a man would have merely resulted into the head being severed at the neck.
And let's not pretend the projectile has more to do with concussion...
Now, let's look at this description of what a sniper can do to the head of a man, and the associated energy figures.
We see that the vast majority of kinetic energy figures are found to be between 3.5 and 6.8 KJ (except for the much higher .50 caliber bullets), and somewhere in those figures, there is a capacity to blow half of a face away.
The pistol was fired at a relatively very short range (Honsu started less than seven meters away from the back of the bunker and it seems he may have gotten up and closed the distance by the time he got noticed by Hawke).
I don't see where Connor got the idea that the projectiles blew the heads apart. That's silly. How can you blow a head apart and have a crater in lieu of the face at the same time?
Besides, why liken the projectile to an explosive?
After Hawke fires the aft autogun and jumps off the controls to move Hitch's body out the automatic door, Hawke is hit by the same weapon:
"A shape loomed up out of the dust. He fell back as a bullet tore across his shoulder."
And obviously, this is not an exploding shell. Notice that Hawke survives for the whole book.
Connor claims about 1 or 2 kilos of TNT, 4.184 or 8.368 megajoules. Only that.
That's oh just practically a thousand times greater than what could be considered enough to obtain the effects as described in the book!
Seriously, what's that? Time Bullet and Hollywood fizzix all rolled in one?Connor MacLeod wrote: PAge 16CSM throws a grenade into close confines. I think the Guardsmen in question might have been partly protected. but being phyiscally picked up and hurled against the wall is still fairly violent. This does imply that the flak protects against the kinds of Frag grenades Space Marines carry, which as we see can be fairly powerful.Guardsman Hawke scremed as fire and whickering fragments lashed his body. The force of the explosion picked him up and slammed him against the wall of the listening post.
....
He had time to scream once before the pressure wave snatched the breath from his lungs, ,slamming his head into the wall and taking the pain away.
Since when can he scream before the supersonic nearby blast reaches him?
Solution: the book describes the guy screaming while he's been heaved. The grenades, here, are quite powerful though. We don't know anything about their size however.
I quote this solely to remind the reader that the next part I quote below followed that one in Connor's original post.Connor MacLeod wrote: Page 22The implication of some FTL detection (passive) to detect the arrival/presence of a large fleet. It also indicates that it would take said fleet "days" to reach the planet. That would generally be suggestive of accelerations on the tens or hundreds of gees range. Then again its bound to contain transports as well as warships, so it could be the warships are constrained by the speed of the slower ships.Nothing should be able to enter even the outer edges of the system without them being aware of it... could it?
...
No, the logic engines would have screamed the place down many days ago if it had detected this size of fleet approaching. Somehow these starships had avoided detection by some of the rarest and most precious equipment available to the Adeptus Mechanicus.
It is relevant to what follows;
I don't know where the reference of a former artificial extinction level comes from, and I would obviously advise taking such a claim with a grain of salt.Connor MacLeod wrote: Page 24Magma bombs launched by a Iron Warriors battle barge above. "heat of a star" taken literally might infer mid to high gigaton/low teraton range warheads, (note the italics, because this isn't certain) but not much larger, because the yields would be well into extinction level. Hell, at the yields as it is, they probably could inflict significant global effects as it is. (Though Hydra Cordatus was already subject to extinction level firepower before, so its not exactly "habitable" to begin with..)Others smashed into runways, cratering them and melting the honeycombed adamantium with the heat of a star.
That, because we also know what a magma bomb is worth of, and what it is used for (see here). Near extinction level firepower is certainly not part of such a weapon's function. Hell, even heavy magma bombs are still "only" used to reduce ground installations to rubble.
Now, I'm going to provide more than the cherry picked portion of the text Connor decided to highlight for his observation. There is stuff that's described before and after it. However, he picked this very limited piece, for a clear reason: it is the only one that allows him to suggest gigaton/teraton firepower.
It's simply impossible to call this something else other than dishonesty, and here's why:
They throw debris into the air and flatten the silos in the mountains. They don't flatten the mountains themselves.Storm of Iron, Chapter Three wrote: NEARLY A THOUSAND men died in the first seconds of the Iron Warriors' initial bombardment of
Jericho Falls spaceport. The battle barge Stonebreaker fired three salvoes of magma bombs
into the desolate rocky slopes surrounding the spaceport, blasting vast chunks of rock
hundreds of metres into the air and flattening almost all the torpedo silos in the mountains
with unerring accuracy.
I'd be surprised if they reached beyond terajoules of concussion force.
Obviously nowhere gigaton level. The size of the "great craters" is hard to determine.Storm of Iron, Chapter Three wrote: Alarm sirens screamed and the spaceport's weapon batteries rumbled into firing positions as
their gunners desperately sought to acquire targets before being annihilated. A few hastily
blessed torpedoes roared upwards through the orange sky on pillars of fiery smoke and
powerful beams of laser energy stabbed through the perpetually cloudless heavens.
More bombs fell, this time within the perimeter of Jericho Falls, demolishing buildings,
gouging great craters and hurling enormous clouds of umber ash into the atmosphere.
Flames from burning structures lit the smoke from within and bodies lay aflame in the
wreckage of the shattered spaceport. Smashed aircraft littered the ground and more exploded
as the heat from the fires cooked off their weapons and fuel tanks.
Bombs slammed into the rockcrete, scything lethal fragments everywhere. Others smashed
into the runways, cratering them and melting the honeycombed adamantium with the heat of
a star.
Magma bombs obviously come with a significant momentum, which will make their impacts much more efficient at cratering than if you tried to gouge earth by just blowing up a bomb placed onto the surface. Considering that the spaceport is reduced to burning rubble, that buildings and the runway are consumed by fire, etc., it's obvious that the cratering is extensive due to the fact it's a barrage of weapon fire, not because the craters themselves would be ungodly large.
We do not expect kilometer wide craters, and as such once again we would have no reason to look for more than terajoules of energy at play, really. And even that much firepower is quite silly since they wanted to establish some camp there, since apparently taking the runway was important.
No comments.Storm of Iron, Chapter Three wrote: The Marauders and Lightnings out in the open took the worst of the barrage, pulverised by
the force of the explosions.
The noise and confusion were unbelievable; the sky was red with flames and black with
smoke. Heavy lasfire blasted upwards.
A number of shells impacted on the main hangar's roof. Its armoured structure had absorbed
the damage so far, though vast cracks now zigzagged across the reinforced walls and roof.
The main runway was engulfed in flames, burning pools of jet fuel spewing thick black
smoke that turned day into night.
Hell had come to Hydra Cordatus.
Notice that Connor never provides any supplementary material other than his "fine selection".
I'll pass on the notes used for the coming calculation...