So I am diddling away at my Sword Worlder military TOEs and I am theorizing about how the baseline TL 11 and TL 12 units deploying the PGMP-12 weapon system. I can see it as a squad support weapon with limitations. First I see the ROF and limited "ammo" ( Plasma bolts) as a limitation. Also the range of 750m. Suddenly I am fascinated with the weapon to be honest....its like a flame thrower (albeit a tiny sun flare) XM-25 support weapon hybrid. Thus you can imagine the theoretical hard on!
o: What I mean is given my RL experience " Taliban 500 m behind those rocks ... zap [rock explodes (plasma)] fried Taliban with rock splinters." get my drift?
Now in order for the weapon to be truly effective the Gunner is going to need an A/G (assistant Gunner in other parlance a ammo bearer and protector or "donkey") I can see a tactical engagement with the Squad leader identifying targets and the PGMP-12 gunner blasting away.... then in a protracted engagement what happens if the gunner goes black on the fuel cell ....
. The A/G saves the day! ... the donkey slaps in the new 6000 gram fuel cell ... shazam 40 more bolts of death, destruction and cosmic mayhem...
I see it being a necessity for such weapons systems to be employed with a mounted type unit with fusion power plants.. ie Mechanized Units and Armored Cavalry for the sake of recharging the fuel cells. Always pay to to be good friends with your local tanker
Now my question is mainly aimed at the veterans / military history nuts who happen to be on the forums. What is the effectiveness against bunkers?, MOUNT combat dynamics (ie Buildings)?, what is its true anti-armor potential? like its bigger cousins the A, B & C guns does it have a blast radius?
Now coming full circle to the beginning of my post the trickle down effect of the new advances in equipment. I can see the TL-11 units especially elite armored units getting a few, but and here is my moment of brilliance (and no I haven't been drinking
o
I can see it being used by Pioneers ( Combat Engineers) like a flame thrower to clear strong points and built up defenses... my example is the German Reserve Guards Pioneer Regiment of the First World War (totenkopf sleeve symbols and all) they were pardon the pun " the fire brigade" of the western front because the specialized in flame thrower attacks!
Anyway ... will somebody on the forums with a higher cerebral capability care to comment or answer my questions?
Below from CT Book 4-
The first light energy weapon (other than lasers), the weapon consists of a power pack carried on the firer's back, the weapon itself, and a flexible power link. The power pack powers a laser ignition system in the weapon itself which heats hydrogen fuel to a plasma state. The plasma is contained in the ignition chamber briefly and then released through a magnetically focused field along the weapon's barrel. The high initial velocity plasma jet is 2 cm in diameter but begins to dissipate immediately. Each power pack has sufficient energy to discharge 40 plasma bolts before recharging is necessary. Each pull of the trigger discharges one plasma bolt. Because of the considerable recoil, the PGMP-12 may only be fired every other combat round. Recharging requires four
hours connected to a high energy source (such as a ship's power unit).
Length: 800 mm. Weight of weapon: 6000 grams. Weight of power pack: 3000 grams.

Now in order for the weapon to be truly effective the Gunner is going to need an A/G (assistant Gunner in other parlance a ammo bearer and protector or "donkey") I can see a tactical engagement with the Squad leader identifying targets and the PGMP-12 gunner blasting away.... then in a protracted engagement what happens if the gunner goes black on the fuel cell ....

I see it being a necessity for such weapons systems to be employed with a mounted type unit with fusion power plants.. ie Mechanized Units and Armored Cavalry for the sake of recharging the fuel cells. Always pay to to be good friends with your local tanker

Now my question is mainly aimed at the veterans / military history nuts who happen to be on the forums. What is the effectiveness against bunkers?, MOUNT combat dynamics (ie Buildings)?, what is its true anti-armor potential? like its bigger cousins the A, B & C guns does it have a blast radius?
Now coming full circle to the beginning of my post the trickle down effect of the new advances in equipment. I can see the TL-11 units especially elite armored units getting a few, but and here is my moment of brilliance (and no I haven't been drinking


Anyway ... will somebody on the forums with a higher cerebral capability care to comment or answer my questions?
Below from CT Book 4-
The first light energy weapon (other than lasers), the weapon consists of a power pack carried on the firer's back, the weapon itself, and a flexible power link. The power pack powers a laser ignition system in the weapon itself which heats hydrogen fuel to a plasma state. The plasma is contained in the ignition chamber briefly and then released through a magnetically focused field along the weapon's barrel. The high initial velocity plasma jet is 2 cm in diameter but begins to dissipate immediately. Each power pack has sufficient energy to discharge 40 plasma bolts before recharging is necessary. Each pull of the trigger discharges one plasma bolt. Because of the considerable recoil, the PGMP-12 may only be fired every other combat round. Recharging requires four
hours connected to a high energy source (such as a ship's power unit).
Length: 800 mm. Weight of weapon: 6000 grams. Weight of power pack: 3000 grams.
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