bmStrosstrupp wrote:
1, Reduced armour for increased manoeuvrability. Gunpowder rendered heavy armour relatively useless.
Yes!
2, Bright, colourful uniforms were a sign of prestige. Representing the country or state the army belonged to. Trench warfare changed the way battles were faught, as such the emphasis was on not attracting attention.
Uniform colors did play an important role in later national and unit pride development (18th & 19th century) but in the 16th and 17th armies were far less standardized, and tended still to be mostly mercenary armies.
3, Shrapnel. Artillery blasts produced large amounts of shrapnel responisble for many deaths and injuries in the opening months of the Great War.
Yes! Right on.
4, Artillery. Can't think of how to be more precise.
That'll do it. Yes!
5, Britain
Sorry, no on this one.
6, Germany/Prussia
Yes! Now what helmet was that?
7, Shrapnel? Sky-born grape shot!!
The sky-born part is right; both helmets were designed to protect the wearer from dangers falling from above. In 1400, the concern was arrows and in 1914 shrapnel.
8, Britain
No. That leaves one major option...
9, Germany
Yes! Easily the most effective!
10, France? Im guessing really
No - none. The answer is a trick; the Americans never made a helmet in World War I.
11, Hmm, I don't know that there is any name for the design. I'll have to desribe it! Well it had brown, khaki and green patches seperated by thick black lines. It proved ideal for use in the country side as well as in the trenches.
No - what you're describing is the later design of camouflage that would dominate all armies. The initial camouflage was very simple but amazingly effective.
12, Germany, America, Britain, Russia?
Yes! All four!
13, No idea!
Has something to do with the liner.
14, I'll hazard an educated guess and say that it was true.
No - false. While not universally used (read Knight-Dragon's descriptions) there was a Japanese steel helmet. The British, Australians and Americans showered the Japanese with shrapnel too...
15, Pass, Im not up on my French WW history!
The fact that I stopped at 1940 was a hint.
16, Pass
This country switched sides.
17, Er..Pass
Knight-Dragon and Knowltok have the right basic idea; it's just farther down the "process".
18, Cheaper to produce?
No. Hint: Less head scratching...
19, Pass
A couple folks have already correctly guessed the political innovation. Here's a hint about the technical one: a couple months ago an American soldier in Afghanistan was shot in the head - and all he got was a concussion.
20, WW1 Prussian leather helmet?
Very, verrryyy close, but no.
21, C
C is true...too...
Well thats that. Will you be posting a list of answers up?
I'll let people take some more stabs, then when either everything's covered or they've stallde on some, I'll cave in. Good run bmSs!
1, Reduced armour for increased manoeuvrability. Gunpowder rendered heavy armour relatively useless.
Yes!
2, Bright, colourful uniforms were a sign of prestige. Representing the country or state the army belonged to. Trench warfare changed the way battles were faught, as such the emphasis was on not attracting attention.
Uniform colors did play an important role in later national and unit pride development (18th & 19th century) but in the 16th and 17th armies were far less standardized, and tended still to be mostly mercenary armies.
3, Shrapnel. Artillery blasts produced large amounts of shrapnel responisble for many deaths and injuries in the opening months of the Great War.
Yes! Right on.
4, Artillery. Can't think of how to be more precise.
That'll do it. Yes!
5, Britain
Sorry, no on this one.
6, Germany/Prussia
Yes! Now what helmet was that?
7, Shrapnel? Sky-born grape shot!!
The sky-born part is right; both helmets were designed to protect the wearer from dangers falling from above. In 1400, the concern was arrows and in 1914 shrapnel.
8, Britain
No. That leaves one major option...
9, Germany
Yes! Easily the most effective!
10, France? Im guessing really
No - none. The answer is a trick; the Americans never made a helmet in World War I.
11, Hmm, I don't know that there is any name for the design. I'll have to desribe it! Well it had brown, khaki and green patches seperated by thick black lines. It proved ideal for use in the country side as well as in the trenches.
No - what you're describing is the later design of camouflage that would dominate all armies. The initial camouflage was very simple but amazingly effective.
12, Germany, America, Britain, Russia?
Yes! All four!
13, No idea!
Has something to do with the liner.
14, I'll hazard an educated guess and say that it was true.
No - false. While not universally used (read Knight-Dragon's descriptions) there was a Japanese steel helmet. The British, Australians and Americans showered the Japanese with shrapnel too...
15, Pass, Im not up on my French WW history!
The fact that I stopped at 1940 was a hint.
16, Pass
This country switched sides.
17, Er..Pass
Knight-Dragon and Knowltok have the right basic idea; it's just farther down the "process".
18, Cheaper to produce?
No. Hint: Less head scratching...
19, Pass
A couple folks have already correctly guessed the political innovation. Here's a hint about the technical one: a couple months ago an American soldier in Afghanistan was shot in the head - and all he got was a concussion.
20, WW1 Prussian leather helmet?
Very, verrryyy close, but no.
21, C
C is true...too...
Well thats that. Will you be posting a list of answers up?
I'll let people take some more stabs, then when either everything's covered or they've stallde on some, I'll cave in. Good run bmSs!