• @espentan
    link
    English
    146 months ago

    Back when a solid plank was all I took to protect you from rifle fire. Or does the encasing serve some other purpose, perhaps?

    • @Boinkage
      link
      English
      246 months ago

      It also serves as a bike ramp. The Confederate soldiers were well known for their love of BMX tricks.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      146 months ago

      Wood still wasn’t strong enough to sustain a lot of fire even from those rifles. The confederacy just didn’t have enough iron.

      • @d00ery
        link
        English
        56 months ago

        That’s some pretty thick wood at a good angle. Maybe there’s a mythbusters, but I’d expect it could protect against small arms fire of the day.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          46 months ago

          Wood is definitely better than nothing, but I don’t really see a situation in which this thing would need protection against small arms anyway. Unless something has already gone horribly wrong, those small arms are a significant distance from your artillery. At that range, they are already effectively worthless because their lack of rifling makes them horribly inaccurate.

          If I had to guess, you would mainly be worried about union sharpshooters (maybe) and artillery. At that point the only real advantage of the wood is the obstruction of sight.

          • @PugJesusOPM
            link
            English
            56 months ago

            The standard rifled muskets of the time actually had a range of about a kilometer.

          • @espentan
            link
            English
            46 months ago

            The fourth guy from the right looks so confident; oh yeah, you think you got what it takes? Bring it!