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Thread: Greek Technology

  1. #1

    Question Greek Technology

    Could you perhaps work some of the more advanced(or theoretical) Greek weaponry or other technologies into the mod?

  2. #2
    Not Just A Name; A Way Of Life Member Sarcasm's Avatar
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    Default Re: Greek Technology

    Like what?



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  3. #3
    Ming the Merciless is my idol Senior Member Watchman's Avatar
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    Default Re: Greek Technology

    "I call it... 'death ray'."
    "Let us remember that there are multiple theories of Intelligent Design. I and many others around the world are of the strong belief that the universe was created by a Flying Spaghetti Monster. --- Proof of the existence of the FSM, if needed, can be found in the recent uptick of global warming, earthquakes, hurricanes, and other natural disasters. Apparently His Pastaness is to be worshipped in full pirate regalia. The decline in worldwide pirate population over the past 200 years directly corresponds with the increase in global temperature. Here is a graph to illustrate the point."

    -Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster

  4. #4

    Default Re: Greek Technology

    All that weaponry and defense mechanisms that Arcimedes(sp?) made at Syracuse for instance.

  5. #5

    Default Re: Greek Technology

    If people would make them, we'd love to have them. We have no one who is active who knows how to make the animations for siege equipment work.

  6. #6

    Default Re: Greek Technology

    Perhaps you should put out an advertisment for modders that CAN do that?

  7. #7
    Member Member Helgi's Avatar
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    Default Re: Greek Technology

    They tried to do a Archimedes death ray on some tv show using a brieme as a target, they couldn't get it to work
    Blackadder:"Whatever it was, I'm sure it was better than my plan to get out of this by pretending to be mad. I mean, who would have noticed another madman round here?"


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  8. #8

    Default Re: Greek Technology

    Well, we're not interested in the death ray, but other types of siege equipment - yes. Pretty much everyone who mods RTW knows about us, and all the achievements and improvements we've done for in the game. We'd love to have more help from people who are talented in most areas of the game if they are really interested in helping us. Animations, skinning, modelling, traits, whatever.

  9. #9

    Default Re: Greek Technology

    I've heard of a steam-powered cannon, proven to work...

  10. #10
    Armoured Hoplite Fanatic Member germanpeon's Avatar
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    Default Re: Greek Technology

    I heard about that ship burning device (mirrors and some sort of telescope maybe) Archimedes designed and the steam cannon. I saw a show on the History Channel that proved the ship burning device impractical because it took them about 100 mirrors and maybe half an hour to set a pieve of wood on fire. I think the cannon was proven to be unrealistic because of the amount of time it would take to heat the water (steam), and because it wasnt powerful enough to deliver a projectile to a long range target.

  11. #11
    EB TRIBVNVS PLEBIS Member MarcusAureliusAntoninus's Avatar
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    Default Re: Greek Technology

    Quote Originally Posted by Helgi
    They tried to do a Archimedes death ray on some tv show using a brieme as a target, they couldn't get it to work
    Yea! Mythbusters!
    Quote Originally Posted by Imperator Silas
    I've heard of a steam-powered cannon, proven to work...
    Mythbusters again!


  12. #12
    EB Beta Tester & Sex Slave Member Brightblade's Avatar
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    Default Re: Greek Technology

    Ion Cannon Ready.

    *cries tears of nostalgia*


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  13. #13
    Member Member Spectral's Avatar
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    Default Re: Greek Technology

    Originally Posted by Helgi
    They tried to do a Archimedes death ray on some tv show using a brieme as a target, they couldn't get it to work
    Yea! Mythbusters!
    Actually, it looks like their conclusions weren't as definitive as that...

    http://web.mit.edu/2.009/www/experim...desResult.html

    http://web.mit.edu/2.009/www/experim...thbusters.html

    xv) Did it really happen?
    We're not historians and cannot answer this question. Overall, there are a number of special conditions and important details that need to be considered to get the death ray to start a fire. However, given the location of the city, the local conditions, the ease of implementing the idea once one has worked out the sensitivities, and the brilliance of Archimedes, my own opinion is that I personally can't rule it out all together (can't say it happened either). However, our goal was to use Mythbusters to motivate doing a quantitative estimation of feasibility, to demonstrate the possibility using a sketch model experiment, and to have some fun in the process.
    Last edited by Spectral; 02-15-2007 at 11:29.

  14. #14

    Default Re: Greek Technology

    but check out the book Barbarians the next time you visit the Library. it contains all the research that proves this and many other weapons existance.

  15. #15
    EBII Mod Leader Member Foot's Avatar
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    Default Re: Greek Technology

    Quote Originally Posted by Imperator Silas
    but check out the book Barbarians the next time you visit the Library. it contains all the research that proves this and many other weapons existance.
    What? the Terry Jones' book?

    Foot
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  16. #16

    Default Re: Greek Technology

    Don't use mythbusters as a refference, particularily when they detemine something "couldn't happen". All too often they equate their own incapability in repeating something as proof it can't be done. Sometimes they're right (especially when they take something which is proven to be impossible beforehand), but much of the time it's just juvenile bravado.

    I think, though, that most of inventions of Archimedes weren't all that great. If they were, it is very likely that at least some of the better ones would find their ways into the Roman arsenal - this was, after all, how they got nearly all of their military technology.
    But do we see a noticable change in Roman siege or missile technology after the fall of Syracuse? Not really. Though Archimedes was killed in the sacking of the city, much of his devices would have remained, as would people who have seen and operated them survive - at least some of them. If there was indeed as much value as believed to recover, it would be unfantomable for the Romans not to copy it.

    My guess is that Archimedes and his siege engines weren't nearly as advanced as we would believe. It was probably, in 99% of the cases, just regular contemporary altillery, just more numerus and better utilised, better deployed, better led and used to a greater effect than contemporary altillery. A few extraordinary engines of limited use - like the Claw - probably cemented the myth.
    Not an insignificant feat, but not nearly as special as believed.

    McHrozni

  17. #17

    Default Re: Greek Technology

    I've seen the principle of the 'death ray' demonstrated ('What the Ancients Did for Us'). He used modern flat mirrors, but talked about 'shiny sheilds'. I'd have thought that a modest array of large flat mirrors, mounted on pivots would be easier to aim at one spot and set fire to, maybe a sail.

    By and large, such engines would be one offs and in any case, when do you get a ship in a city battle?

    I'd like to see an 'earthen ramp' option, possibly based on mines (because they don't move) or siege towers (because they do the same job, but do move). But I know that even if you did a visual model of a ramp, you may still have to push it up to the wall and the look embarrased as the soldiers walk into it and then levitated vertically up near the wall (it's bad enough with a vanilla tower).

  18. #18
    EB Beta Tester & Sex Slave Member Brightblade's Avatar
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    Default Re: Greek Technology

    It would really suck if it suddenly got cloudy when they were gonna use that on the enemy fleet


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  19. #19
    Member Member Axelus's Avatar
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    Default Re: Greek Technology

    I've also watched the BBC Ancients program. The thing is, that experiment is on a much smaller scale. The mirror is about 10 times bigger than the boat, and I wouldnt think they were able to build such a big mirror. It doesnt have to be alot bigger though, but since the ships IRL will be alot more further away, than in the experiment (where the boat was about an arm's length away from the mirror), it is also alot more difficult to project all the mirrors correctly.
    Last edited by Axelus; 02-15-2007 at 18:36.

  20. #20
    EB TRIBVNVS PLEBIS Member MarcusAureliusAntoninus's Avatar
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    Default Re: Greek Technology

    Two problems with a "deathray":
    No polished glass mirrors back then.
    And it would be nearly impossible to get enough guys holding enough mirrors and get them all to aim a single spot on a moving object far away. Maybe if you drilled a unit for a couple years...


  21. #21
    Member Member Spectral's Avatar
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    Default Re: Greek Technology

    No polished glass mirrors back then.
    What about reading the sites I posted :


    ii) Archimedes would only have had access to bronze or silver plated mirrors.
    Yes, my impression is that Archimedes would certainly have had access to polished bronze at this time. It is not clear if he would have had silver mirrors. If silver was available, silver mirrors would be about as good as the mirrors we used. Bronze would not be as good. But polished, it is actually a fairly good reflector. Its lower reflectivity can be compensated for by increasing the collector area.

    Considering the reflectivity of polished brass/bronze, my initial estimate is that we would need to increase the size of the array by roughly 1.5 times for bronze reflectors to work. The bronze mirror array used for the subsequent test with the Mythbusters was 2.4 times larger, accounting for the bronze and for the shorter time available to heat the wood to ignition temperature (see FAQ iii).
    ---

    And it would be nearly impossible to get enough guys holding enough mirrors and get them all to aim a single spot on a moving object far away. Maybe if you drilled a unit for a couple years...
    Who talked about "moving objects far away", or moving ships ? Once again, I think it would be best to read the links I provided, they *show* to within a certain degree of doubt, that an incident like this was not all that impossible to have happened...

  22. #22
    Member Member Bonny's Avatar
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    Default Re: Greek Technology

    ~50 years ago a greek historian tested it and it worked (one time with small boat in a water basin and one time on some wood far away from the people who hold the shields)

    And it would be nearly impossible to get enough guys holding enough mirrors and get them all to aim a single spot on a moving object far away. Maybe if you drilled a unit for a couple years...
    Syrakus was really big city and i doubt they would have problems to find enough people to hold the shields.

    The theory of using sunrays to make a fire is true, but if they were able using this system to make a warship catch fire back in the ancient days of rome and Quart Hadast is still (and imho will be forever) debatable.


  23. #23
    Ming the Merciless is my idol Senior Member Watchman's Avatar
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    Default Re: Greek Technology

    Quote Originally Posted by Bonny
    ~50 years ago a greek historian tested it and it worked (one time with small boat in a water basin and one time on some wood far away from the people who hold the shields).
    I saw the film footage on it a while ago. Thought the historian dude was full of it all the time, and almost definitely on the Ancient Greece Iz Kewl trip. Nationalism.

    Shields my arse. Those things were type 1x2 meter flat mirrors; way bigger than even the pavise-type tower shields "sparabara"-school archer-defender spearmen often used, and the Greeks never. Given that the bronze-covered shields the Greeks used were round, about a meter in diameter, and concave, I had sort of major problems seeing what the "test" had to do with proving the death-ray story.

    Plus the Mediterranean is not the swimming pool and Roman war galleys not the miniature he did it with.

    It's not like you couldn't use focused sunlight to set stuff alight from a distance. It's just that given the circumstances I have sort of difficulties believing the Syracusans had the necessary resources for it, or that the conditions of the siege - particularly on the seawards side - were particularly cooperative. And surely, if old Arch managed to get it to work, it'd have been employed against the rather more static siegeworks on land as well ?

    The rest of the weird stuff the old codger reputedly devised during the siege doesn't sound too strange - clever application of machinery was quite popular for that sort of thing where the technical know-how existed. The Chinese regularly used some pretty interesting stuff both on attack and defense, and I've read intrepid engineers and inventors came up with some quite creative ideas during the various Crusades. It's not like the Romans were half bad at it either.

    Those sorts of things tend to go under the bonuses given by ancilliaries like Inventors, Siege Engineers and Archimedes himself in RTW though, don't they ? The game engine is really a bit basic when it comes to these things.
    "Let us remember that there are multiple theories of Intelligent Design. I and many others around the world are of the strong belief that the universe was created by a Flying Spaghetti Monster. --- Proof of the existence of the FSM, if needed, can be found in the recent uptick of global warming, earthquakes, hurricanes, and other natural disasters. Apparently His Pastaness is to be worshipped in full pirate regalia. The decline in worldwide pirate population over the past 200 years directly corresponds with the increase in global temperature. Here is a graph to illustrate the point."

    -Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster

  24. #24

    Default Re: Greek Technology

    Quote Originally Posted by Watchman
    And surely, if old Arch managed to get it to work, it'd have been employed against the rather more static siegeworks on land as well ?
    Now here I might have an answer. Looking at Syracuse on Google Earth and various Googled maps of the ancient city (OK, not the most strenuous research, but how much are you really going to do in a few minutes?) it seems that the city had open sea to the east, the harbour bay to the south (wide open, nearly a mile across the mouth today). Behind the city to the north is a gentle hill that may or may not have been occupied. If it was then there was sea to the north too. And to the west a marshy area that gently slopes up into the island of Sicily.

    So besieging forces are almost certainly exclusivley west of the city, maybe north and above too. Whereas shipping would approach from the east and the whole of the southern quarter.

    So there was more opportunity for using sunlight on ships because you could do it in the morning and mid day (mid day being when the rays are strongest) but you are limited to the evening for the west and can't do the north at all.

    I actually see more reason to doubt the claw's existance with such a broad bay. Could it have been a dockyard crane that had stories grow up around it?

  25. #25
    Ming the Merciless is my idol Senior Member Watchman's Avatar
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    Default Re: Greek Technology

    I'm under the impression Roman siege engineering wasn't yet too hot around that time. Syracusan, on the other hand, was. Add in whatever weirdness Archie came up with, and I've no doubt the Italic rustics were generally in awe of actually fairly normal stuff.

    Plus claiming the Syracusans had pretty much everything short of a machine gun would have been an useful face-saving excuse for the siege taking as long as it did.

    Personally, I figure that if the Syracusans went and burned some Roman warships at range they just used normal incendiary weaponry. I've seen it mentioned fire-hoses occasionally popped up in Greece already before the Hellenic period, and assorted catapults make pretty decent delivery systems for something unpleasantly flaming. Assuming the Romans were unfamiliar with the idea they could right well have attributed it to pretty much anything up to and including divine intervention, or in this case Archie's infernal devices since the guy was presumably pretty famous and everyone knows them Greeks were way too cunning by half anyway.
    "Let us remember that there are multiple theories of Intelligent Design. I and many others around the world are of the strong belief that the universe was created by a Flying Spaghetti Monster. --- Proof of the existence of the FSM, if needed, can be found in the recent uptick of global warming, earthquakes, hurricanes, and other natural disasters. Apparently His Pastaness is to be worshipped in full pirate regalia. The decline in worldwide pirate population over the past 200 years directly corresponds with the increase in global temperature. Here is a graph to illustrate the point."

    -Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster

  26. #26

    Default Re: Greek Technology

    A secret unit available from Syracuse:

    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 



    EB ship system destroyer and Makedonia FC

  27. #27
    Villiage Idiot Member antisocialmunky's Avatar
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    Default Re: Greek Technology

    I've heard of Greek man-portable flame throwers being used in later years by the Byzantines. It was, I believe a simple handheld pump fed with Greek fire with some sort of wick attached to the front. It was said to be used my men in the front rank to strike fear into enemies. The problem with this weapon is that I'm not sure when it was invented.

    If you want to add some flavor stuff to the Greeks, you could give them those belly-crossbows. I'm not sure that they were still used in that period though.

    Alot of the cool stuff is too anachronistic to use like Dendra Panapoly. It would be cool to see guys running around in full bronze plate armour.

    http://www.larp.com/hoplite/Walpole.jpg

    I wouldn't mind seeing some 'what if' type units for the Koinon Hellenon since they were a historically adaptive people. It would be interesting to see some Hellenic Legionaire events happening at the very least.
    Last edited by antisocialmunky; 02-17-2007 at 00:17.
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  28. #28
    EB TRIBVNVS PLEBIS Member MarcusAureliusAntoninus's Avatar
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    Default Re: Greek Technology

    "Incendiary gernades" were invented as early as the Achamenid Era.


  29. #29

    Default Re: Greek Technology

    What about those handheld ballistas that the Greeks and Romans supposedley had?

    MARMOREAM•RELINQUO•QUAM•LATERICIAM•ACCEPI

  30. #30

    Default Re: Greek Technology

    Quote Originally Posted by MarcusAureliusAntoninus
    "Incendiary gernades" were invented as early as the Achamenid Era.
    Really? I find that really hard to believe.
    I shouldn't have to live in a world where all the good points are horrible ones.

    Is he hurt? Everybody asks that. Nobody ever says, 'What a mess! I hope the doctor is not emotionally harmed by having to deal with it.'

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