My Assistant
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Nov 26 2007, 04:12 AM
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#76
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Immortal Elf ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 11,410 Joined: 1-October 03 From: Pittsburgh Member No.: 5,670 |
the thing is, that technology is inherently free. all you have to do is teach your replicator to build more replicators.
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Nov 26 2007, 05:42 AM
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#77
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Running Target ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 1,326 Joined: 15-April 02 Member No.: 2,600 |
The second replicator is free. The first one might cost 800 million nuyen. There's all sorts of reasons why someone who spends 800 million making something might not be motivated to make it self-replicating (like, say, profit). Since we're making up the technology for the game, there's no need for it to do anything we don't want it to do. The miniature nanobots can breakdown a rifle and put it back together one time, for say 100k. That'll be the going rate for the untraceable, undetectable sniper rifle. It makes it more of a plot point than gear (especially since once its reassembled, its just a book sniper rifle).
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Nov 26 2007, 07:06 AM
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#78
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Immortal Elf ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 11,410 Joined: 1-October 03 From: Pittsburgh Member No.: 5,670 |
what you'd have to do is decide that replicators require some sort of relatively hard-to-acquire element in their composition--weapons-grade plutonium, or somesuch. this assumes that replicators aren't capable of subatomic manipulation--that they can't be used to turn lead into gold, or more importantly, weapons-grade plutonium (or whatever rare element you decide is required to make it go).
nanoconstruction isn't all that fast, and it requires a fair amount of energy--more than could reasonably be stored in your bag-o-rifle. what you'd do is, take your bag-o-rifle and empty it out on a warm, flat surface, like the bottom of a large oven. the warmth would provide the nanites with the energy require; you come back a day later, and you've got a sniper rifle in your oven. or, more reasonably, you've got a pile of sniper rifle parts in your oven that you can quickly assemble into a working weapon. nanoconstruction is a scary topic. it'd be nice if SR delved a bit deeper into how it works, if only to limit the applications it can be used for. |
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Nov 26 2007, 07:25 AM
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#79
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Great Dragon ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 5,537 Joined: 27-August 06 From: Albuquerque NM Member No.: 9,234 |
nano-disassemblers are pretty darn scary too.
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Nov 26 2007, 04:17 PM
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#80
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Moving Target ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 941 Joined: 25-January 07 Member No.: 10,765 |
I recall Augmentation covering self replication of Nanite: they can't do it yet.
THe only reason I recall that is that Shadowrun is not, at this time, worried about a 'Grey Goo' doomsday senario, their nanotech isn't up to the job. |
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Nov 26 2007, 06:02 PM
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#81
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Moving Target ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 385 Joined: 20-August 07 Member No.: 12,766 |
Bear in mind the cost factor. Nanotechnology is relatively stable in Shadowrun, but it's also way too expensive to simply issue to a grunt at the SOTA that SR is set in. I'm not military yet, but I'd guess that snipers / marksmen are a relatively low-cost operating unit - food, ammo, and medical, right? Compare that to a fighter-bomber squadron, and you have a bargan. That's what infantry is all about, economy. Soldiers are relatively versatile, they're usually comparably cheap to field compared to any other line unit (tanks, aircraft, helicopters), and while I hate to say it, they're expendable.
Now let's look at the OICW. Remember what happened with that bad boy? By and large a huge improvement over the M203 if they could just nail the weight and battery issues, but they didn't even bother. Remember why? Because it made your grenadier too expensive to actually put on the field. I guess my point is that Shadowrun nanotech is, by cannon, three things: Reliable, Very Useful, and extremely expensive. That's why you wouldn't see your average sharpshooter team running around with nano-anything. I tend to agree that your average unit - police or military - wouldn't even by chromed. You're eliminating their advantage. |
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Nov 26 2007, 06:12 PM
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#82
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Great Dragon ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 5,537 Joined: 27-August 06 From: Albuquerque NM Member No.: 9,234 |
A modern Sniper Rifle costs $19,000.
The training to use it costs a lot more. They are cheap in comparison to a $75 million aircraft and the $4 billion ship it flies off, but only in comparison. And they have tried to work on the weight and power issues, but it hasn't worked out yet. It's mutated into the XM25 Individual Airburst Weapon System, but still isn't fieldable. |
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Nov 26 2007, 06:42 PM
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#83
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Moving Target ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 941 Joined: 25-January 07 Member No.: 10,765 |
That is not a Modern Sniper Rifle. That is an SOTA prototype looking for a home. Also the rifle portion is less than half the cost, the rest is equally advanced periphrails. Never mind that real milspec sniper rifles are typically A) repurposed assault rifles with some minor work done by a military armorer B) grandad's bolt action hunting rifle, costing roughly 400-600 dollars. C)large caliber 'anti material rifles', which still come in under two grand... |
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Nov 26 2007, 07:30 PM
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#84
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Great Dragon ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 5,537 Joined: 27-August 06 From: Albuquerque NM Member No.: 9,234 |
Umm, no. That's a "marksman" rifle.
The Knight's Armament SR25 Mk11 Mod 0 is the SEAL sniper rifle. It's currently commercially listed at $9000. Without a night scope or suppressor. And with a two year delivery estimate. The Knights Armament XM110 7.62mm Semi-Automatic Sniper System is the new Army sniper rifle. It costs the Army $8500 (when you buy 800), again without a night sight. |
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Nov 26 2007, 07:43 PM
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#85
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Moving Target ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 941 Joined: 25-January 07 Member No.: 10,765 |
The Marine Corps uses the M40 bolt action rifle (granddads hunting rifle...) The US Army uses the M24, also a bolt action... Here is a link to photos of said uniformed 'snipers' using them. The fact that you wish to distinguish the overbudgeted Special Ops guys (Seals...) as Snipers, and the rest of the Sniper School graduates as 'Marksmen' means little to me. ;) EDIT::: To add: As sweet as the SR-25 is, no military could afford the logistics chain entailing a 2 year turn around per rifle. |
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Nov 26 2007, 08:23 PM
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#86
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Great Dragon ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 5,537 Joined: 27-August 06 From: Albuquerque NM Member No.: 9,234 |
They are replacing/supplementing the M24 with M110s.
http://www.army.mil/-news/2007/04/23/2803-...ive-new-weapon/ The SR-25 has a two year lead-time on the commercial market. Because the guys who order in bulk with .mil addresses always go to the head of the line. |
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Nov 26 2007, 08:47 PM
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#87
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Moving Target ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 941 Joined: 25-January 07 Member No.: 10,765 |
I should point out that the XM110 falls into the 'repurposed assault rifle' catagory. Did you see the pictures? That thing is closely related to the existing M16 weapons (as the SR-25 is explicitly a very heavily modified M16, as I recall from articles back in the day...)
On costs: Given that the military has a long standing tradition of overpaying for stuff.... :D That's still less than the 19k you? quoted earlier. |
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Nov 26 2007, 09:53 PM
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#88
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Great Dragon ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 5,537 Joined: 27-August 06 From: Albuquerque NM Member No.: 9,234 |
Add the night sight :D
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Nov 27 2007, 02:38 AM
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#89
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Neophyte Runner ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 2,283 Joined: 12-October 07 Member No.: 13,662 |
Nanotech:
Part of my reason for thinking this goes too far is because... if I can' make hard nannites self-assemble or do things like this, there's very little to stop you from having them self-assemble into nearly anything with programming. Damn I need a knife, hey little guys line up and lock up... wait I need a screwdriver.. hammer... crowbar.... That's getting silly, it doesn't make sense that they have that kind of holding power or rigidity. Self assembly brings up the whole grey goo problem. Now... Spike, stop before you make yourself look even worse... At best for a bolt action high precision rifle without optics (precision bolt action, trigger group, precision medium or heavy weight barrel, synthetic stock). Starting figures are roughly in the $3500. That's w/ no optics, no fixtures, no anything. That's a basic accurized bolt rifle in a common calibre like 7.62nato (this is the kind which is commonly bought by law enforcement for 'urban sniping'). Or a match grade semi-auto rifle like a M1A (civilian M-14). The rifle I'm mentioning has a factory guaranteed precision of .25MOA. So this is no piece of junk. http://www.snipercentral.com/rifles.htm You'll also note the cost to accurize an off the shelf Remington 700P is listed at $1600. FYI: the Remington 750P typically goes for roughly $750 and it's not uncommon to see it get 1MOA from the factory. (so I'd say as a baseline if a player wanted to accurize the Ruger100 in the SR4 book... it'd cost them 3x base rifle cost) I'd argue that a pricetag on anything starting w/ an X in the military designator is not a good baseline. As that X stands for experimental or developmental. So there's a lot of prototyping costs in there. No one I can think of bases their SNIPER rifles off of ASSAULT rifles. Assault rifles simply put do NOT have the hitting power to hurt something at extreme range. They may have enough to make neat little holes in paper at 600m for the 5.56 crowd, but they don't have the energy to seriously hurt or kill a target in one shot at those ranges. (also there's some severe windage problems on small light projectiles like that and you don't get sighting shots). Also since you seem to need the lesson, what is today the M-16 was originally chambered for 7.62, it wasn't until later that it was changed to the 5.56 ammo so it could compete for the role as an assault rifle. The US Army used the M-21 for ages as it's standard issue sniper rifle, which was based on the M-14 brought up to target competition specs. But the M-14 is type classified as a BATTLE rifle, not an ASSAULT rifle. The SVD may look cosmetically similar to an AK-47 but it was developed independantly of it, it fires a completely different cartidge as well 7.62x54R (also used in their MG's). There is a HUGE difference between a scout-sniper and a designated marksman. The military puts people through two different training tracks for each. The introduction of designated marksman is very recent in fact, as the schools have only been operating for less than 10 years now! Even then, the marines DMR (designated marksman rifle) is basically an accurized M1A (M-14 battle rifle). Or because of need some have been fielding SR-25's (a bigger M-16 chambering 7.62, also a BATTLE RIFLE not an assault rifle). Only a very few have been handed match grade AR-15's and that mostly because of availability and training (you need to retrain your armorers to handle the new weapons in the field). Scout-snipers are NOT a special operations only unit. Snipers are normally attached as battalion level assets and operate independantly or attached to a unit at the whim of the battalion commander. They are a regular army unit MOS. DMR school is a field day compared to scout-sniper school. DMR's are squad level guys (1 guy per combat infantry squad ideally has the long range rifle). Their job is to be able to precision engage targets BEYOND ASSAULT RIFLE RANGE (emphasis necessary). |
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Nov 27 2007, 03:23 AM
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#90
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Immortal Elf ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 11,410 Joined: 1-October 03 From: Pittsburgh Member No.: 5,670 |
Falconer, man, double-time to your nearest unlicensed supplier and acquire some medicinal flammables.
there are a lot of 'sniper rifles' that are repurposed assault rifles. generally, these are chambered in larger calibers, such as 7.62 NATO. some people like to call such large-caliber automatic rifles 'battle rifles', and that is perfectly okay. it also perfectly okay to call them assault rifles. |
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Nov 27 2007, 04:05 AM
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#91
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Running Target ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 1,326 Joined: 15-April 02 Member No.: 2,600 |
I think part of the problem is an assumption that I run into every time I got to a sci-fi movie with certain friends of mine; they assume that because one type of technology exists (say, spaceships), that other parallel-- or even unrelated-- technologies must exist (like say, laser weapons). The problem with that is one type of technology doesn't necessitate another, and even if it did, since we're making it up anyway, it doesn't have to do anything we don't want it to do. Having nanites be able to make a single uncomplicated item (like a crowbar) doesn't mean they can form and re-form into other items like a cloud of cartoon bees, unless you want it to. The technology is only as advanced as it needs to be for the game. The technology beyond that can be as unreachable as the stars; we don't have to imagine any more than we need to. |
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Nov 27 2007, 04:25 AM
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#92
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Great Dragon ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 5,537 Joined: 27-August 06 From: Albuquerque NM Member No.: 9,234 |
That is true, as long as you can articulate a fairly convincing rational reason besides "it's required by the plot".
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Nov 27 2007, 04:40 AM
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#93
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Running Target ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 1,326 Joined: 15-April 02 Member No.: 2,600 |
That reminds me of an answer to a question posed to the creator of Babylon 5 at a sci-fi convention, asking about how fast the spacecraft on the show could travel. "All ships move at the speed of the plot." We figure out what the game needs, and then we justify it by the in-game logic. A more enlightened society might call it "bullshitting".
Having one-shot miniature nanobots makes sense because the corporation that sold them to you wants you to buy more. They're out hundreds of billions in R&D money, and they aren't going to turn a profit if everybody buys one set and moves on. So nanites are going to be very expensive, non-replicating and limited in scope, otherwise no one would be able to justify the expense in creating them. Corporations aren't churning these things out for the good of mankind, they're trying to make a profit. |
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Nov 27 2007, 05:46 AM
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#94
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Dragon ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 4,664 Joined: 21-September 04 From: Arvada, CO Member No.: 6,686 |
The nanobots don't turn into whatever they are building, anymore than a construction worker turns into a skyscraper. They simply take material, and move it around at the nano scale, in numbers of thousands-millions, and eventually it turns into what you wanted. |
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Nov 27 2007, 05:52 PM
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#95
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Moving Target ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 941 Joined: 25-January 07 Member No.: 10,765 |
Falconer: mfb covered the main point of my response much more politely than I would have, so I'll just fill in a few bits of spackle around the edges.
Great: your rifle hits a .25 MOA. The Military generally doesn't shoot for less than 1 MOA, and the FBI only requires a rifle reach .5 MOA for it to be classified as a 'Sniper Rifle' for law enforcement use. Obviously, exceeding the standards is not a bad thing, but it will, naturally, jack the price way up. Second: yes, accurized bolt action rifles cost more than granddad's hunting rifle, but under 2k is nowhere near the 'cost of a new car' prices everyone else has been tossing off. None of this has to do with the Ranger Arms other than my comment that while it fits perfectly with a certain style of play (Day of the Jackal 'Chrome' plated play) it would never be the default 'sniper rifle' of military or paramilitary forces, not even the super swoopty special ops guys with money to burn on overpriced toys that don't perform measurably well in actual operation... that is to say outside of competition shooting. Given that: if your Shadowrun game fits a particular style (Black, or paramilitary commando team) the Ranger Arms is a poor choice over even a more conventional hunting rifle... with a scope. |
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Feb 8 2008, 07:33 AM
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#96
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Moving Target ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 249 Joined: 2-November 06 From: Bozeman, MT Member No.: 9,762 |
Sorry to Necro this, but I just ran across this, a site detailing the Accuracy International AWS Covert. This is a sniper rifle (or so it seems to my inexperienced eyes, after all that does seem to be AI's thing) with integral suppressor that comes with a suitcase to contain all the parts when disassembled. Now, I don't know what the dimensions of this suitcase are, but I'm guessing that it is a bit larger than your standard briefcase. Apparently it is designed for counter terrorism units who need to move their weapons discreetly (don't ask me why a Counter Terrorism unit needs to be discreet when moving weapons). Further the suppressor is supposed to reduce the report to one similar to .22LR match ammunition. Note: this weapon is suggested for uses at around 300m or less as a result of the suppression and trajectory issues of subsonic munitions.
Anyhow, I saw this and immediately thought: "Ranger Arms!" Here's hoping that some of you find this useful. |
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Feb 8 2008, 11:21 AM
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#97
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Freelance Elf ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Dumpshocked Posts: 7,324 Joined: 30-September 04 From: Texas Member No.: 6,714 |
Yeah, that'd be either a sport or sniper rifle in SR's terms (chambered in .308, it can go either way). Swanky. I wish I had one. If so, I would use my rifle-in-a-suitcase powers for good, not evil.
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Feb 8 2008, 11:34 AM
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#98
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Immoral Elf ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 15,247 Joined: 29-March 02 From: Grimy Pete's Bar & Laundromat Member No.: 2,486 |
If so, I would use my rifle-in-a-suitcase powers for good, not evil. That makes one of us. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/biggrin.gif) |
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