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Subject: 
Re: MOC: First World War German Dreadnought: SMS Friedrich der Grosse
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.build, lugnet.build.sculpture, lugnet.boats, lugnet.pirates
Date: 
Wed, 22 Aug 2001 14:53:25 GMT
Viewed: 
33 times
  
In lugnet.build, Lindsay Frederick Braun writes:
In lugnet.build, Bruce Schlickbernd writes:
I liked those WWI BB and BC with the staggered port and starboard turrets.
A great job of buiding it with Lego.

  Thanks!

  I've always liked the wing turret concept.  The theory was
  marvelous, but in the end it wasn't nearly as marvelous as
  the American-pioneered raised-end mounting, which became
  standard by 1916 on capital ships of all nations.

I just like complex looking things - I love really old steam locomotives and
find the streamlined stuff boring.


Of course, my pyrates would sail in under those big guns, board it, and make
those lubbers walk the plank....

  Well, we'd just turn into the wind, that that would be the end
  of that.  ;)

  Actually, the idea of something sneaking in too small and too
  low to hit with the HG was a real fear of capital-ship builders.
  That's why the 88mm guns are there, and why the casemates are
  there too.  The British did away with these for several generations,
  but the Germans kept them.  Oh, and you did see the machineguns
  on top of the flag bridge?  They do angle *down*...

  ...it would be a replay of that movie whose name escapes me, where
  the pirates take over the Coast Guard cutter just to be cut down
  on the deck by the one machinegun, a weapon they really didn't
  know about...

The Island.  Peter Benchly.  Michael Caine.

I did just that scenario in a shared-world (very long explanation which I
will avoid) and simply point out that it was the classic cutting-out foray:
catch 'em in port, board and overwhelm 'em before they know what was
happening.  The wake from a BB would probably sink a pirate boat at sea!  :-)

Bruce



Message has 1 Reply:
  Re: MOC: First World War German Dreadnought: SMS Friedrich der Grosse
 
(...) Well, the modernist 1880-1920s would definitely be your period, I'd bet. :) There's something about the tentativeness of all that period's designs--nothing could be standard, because it was all changing so *quickly* that even standardization (...) (23 years ago, 22-Aug-01, to lugnet.build, lugnet.build.sculpture, lugnet.boats, lugnet.pirates)

Message is in Reply To:
  Re: MOC: First World War German Dreadnought: SMS Friedrich der Grosse
 
(...) Thanks! I've always liked the wing turret concept. The theory was marvelous, but in the end it wasn't nearly as marvelous as the American-pioneered raised-end mounting, which became standard by 1916 on capital ships of all nations. (...) Well, (...) (23 years ago, 21-Aug-01, to lugnet.build, lugnet.build.sculpture, lugnet.boats, lugnet.pirates)

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