fallsfromtrees wrote:I haven't really heard where you plan on putting the messing area, and the training areas, including the firing range, for the marines. Those are also requirements, and the firing range in particular could be a little difficult to fit it. It won't do much good to have marines on board if they are rusty as hell when you get to the destination that they are supposed to assault.
kzt wrote:
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I suspect that it's not exactly impossible to use the mess facilities provided for the flag staff?
Where do you suggest they practice normally using their anti-armor weapons, the ones utilizing wedges or nuclear charge initiated plasma bolts? In the mess hall of a broadsword? How do you think the pinnace pilots practice their drop skills given that most ships spend their transit time in grav wave? Does this seems to result in horrible accidents due to their lack of familiarity with how to fly a pinnace?
For that matter, where exactly do you think the armor platoon of a marine battalion on an amphib in the western pacific practices fire and maneuver? How about an infantry company deliberate attack exercise?
No, these are done in training areas, with reinforcement via simulators when possible. People really don't forget how to shoot or fly in a few weeks if you really have been trained to the level where you should be.
Jonathan_S wrote:And for small arms (or even pulse rifle) firing practice we have no reason to think that the Roland's designers omitted the firing lanes that were standard on other RMN warships - where any naval crewman can practice anything from dueling pistols to (IIRC) pulse rifles.
That's where the Rolands naval ratings, who are to some degree cross trained for boarding actions, or away missions, would do their live fire practice.
Now given the miniscule crew compliment of the Roland it may only be a couple firing lanes, so scheduling the extra Marines through might be annoying.
As an aside - it's probably not long enough to serve as a good rifle range without some computer simulation / support. But it should be easy enough to do something like a holo target pretending to be 200+ yards past backstop and a computer able to extrapolate from where the rounds hit the grav stop to show the virtual remainder of their trajectory.
OK. Answers my questions. I suppose in the followup ships (since the Roland is a transitional type), that proper marine quarters will be included, at least as an option.