Other Jimness > Cinder Spires Spoilers

Shrouds and mass

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DungeonDragon18:
And one of the drawbacks he pointed out was that gunpowder corrodes the barrel, making catastrophic failure more and more likely the more times you use it. He had to replace the barrel of his gun multiple times just while learning how to use it. A cannon is basically all barrel, so you'd only get a few uses out of it before you had to replace it, or risk it exploding and killing your crew members. It's very likely just not worth the expense and risk, when there are techniques to getting past a shroud using much more reliable and long-lasting e-cannons.

knnn:

--- Quote from: DungeonDragon18 on February 05, 2016, 06:00:14 PM ---And one of the drawbacks he pointed out was that gunpowder corrodes the barrel, making catastrophic failure more and more likely the more times you use it. He had to replace the barrel of his gun multiple times just while learning how to use it. A cannon is basically all barrel, so you'd only get a few uses out of it before you had to replace it, or risk it exploding and killing your crew members. It's very likely just not worth the expense and risk, when there are techniques to getting past a shroud using much more reliable and long-lasting e-cannons.

--- End quote ---

Historically canons were made out of bronze (less brittle than iron).  That would be a solution both the canon and pistol.

Mickey Finn:
Try the bar further below ;)

nedserD C B yrraH:
I have been thinking of the shroud like a magnetic field, but an etheric field. It stops etheric energy from passing through, which is why you wouldn't pull your webbing inside the shroud. The webbing runs up/down/out the masts, beyond the radius of the shroud, and then spread out in the currents both air and ether. Once charged, the web interacts with etheric current, more strongly the more it is charged. Sails would be protected by the shroud though and, since the wind would also get through, would function. And yes dropping rocks or other projectiles would definitely get through the shroud.

IMO The real issue, as far as cannons go, is the potential differences between firepowder and gunpowder. In TAW it's firepowder which is so corrosive to the gun barrel, which could also make an exploding cannon ball a very volatile proposition. Old school muskets would have plenty of gunpowder left over in the barrel after firing a shot. If that is what is destroying the barrel, I wouldn't want a bunch of those rolling around in the belly of my ship. All the major advantages of an exploding cannonball would be drawback if firepowder is unstable and/or corrosive. (I keep picturing that old MacGyver oil rig fire episode with the nitroglycerin leaking out of the old dynamite.)

Ether is abundant and cannon crystals/bolts exist, so why risk blowing yourself up? This isn't our earth, basic chemistry is different. Maybe mineral deposits are super rare, too. Gunpowder, iron, tin for bronze, all of these have mining at the core of them; which could be a very dangerous game on a planet where all the wildlife is already dangerous before it is maddened by your blood. Just imagine the moles.

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