Difference between revisions of "18-lber Horse Guard Artillery (ETW Unit)"
Tango12345 (talk | contribs) |
Tango12345 (talk | contribs) m (Removed category "Empire Total War Units"; Quick-adding category "ETW Units" (using HotCat)) |
||
(4 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | {{Unit|image=[[ | + | {{TW Unit|image=[[Image:French 18 horse.png]] |
+ | |Class=Horse Artillery | ||
+ | |Unit Size=24 men | ||
+ | |Weaponry=18 pdr cannon | ||
+ | |Region=Global | ||
+ | |Recruitment Cost=1160 | ||
+ | |Upkeep Cost=290 | ||
+ | |Building Requirements=Engineer School | ||
+ | |Tech Requirements=None | ||
+ | |Attributes=<li>Can Hide in Woodland</li> | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | |||
[[Image:18_lber_horse.png]]Intended to keep up with rapidly-advancing mounted forces, horse artillery batteries have a touch of “cavalry dash” about them. | [[Image:18_lber_horse.png]]Intended to keep up with rapidly-advancing mounted forces, horse artillery batteries have a touch of “cavalry dash” about them. | ||
Line 7: | Line 18: | ||
Historically, in many countries horse artillery developed a cavalry-like air of being an elite force. This attitude is entirely understandable. Dragging heavy artillery pieces across country at the gallop is an inherently dangerous thing to do, even without people shooting at you! | Historically, in many countries horse artillery developed a cavalry-like air of being an elite force. This attitude is entirely understandable. Dragging heavy artillery pieces across country at the gallop is an inherently dangerous thing to do, even without people shooting at you! | ||
− | == | + | ==Details== |
− | This unit is unique to the French and has the advantage of being just as manoevurable as the 3 and 6 | + | This unit is unique to the French and has the advantage of being just as manoevurable as the 3 and 6-pounder horse artillery available to other nations, but packing much more of a punch. Whilst it is also more expensive, it is capable standing up to heavier foot artillery batteries for a limited time and will outgun any 12-pounder cannon. As such, one should replace one's smaller horse artillery units when these guns become available, if one can afford to do so. |
==Factions== | ==Factions== | ||
*[[Image:France_flag.jpg|25px]] [[France (ETW Faction)|France]] | *[[Image:France_flag.jpg|25px]] [[France (ETW Faction)|France]] | ||
− | |||
[[Category:ETW Artillery]] | [[Category:ETW Artillery]] | ||
+ | [[Category:ETW Units]] |
Latest revision as of 09:37, 30 May 2017
Intended to keep up with rapidly-advancing mounted forces, horse artillery batteries have a touch of “cavalry dash” about them.
Overview
Horse artillery units are distinguished from other types of artillery forces because everyone rides into battle: drivers ride the horses, while gun crews are often given seats on the gun limbers. The cannons assigned to horse artillery units usually fire relatively small calibre rounds although, as always, the weight of shot is used to designate different horse artillery types. The weight of fire is considered to be less important than the speed with which it can be moved to a firing position, deployed, and then removed to a new site. This is what gives horse artillery its appeal to generals: the ability to rapidly give fire from almost anywhere on the battlefield. Horse artillery can be used as a flexible reserve, or to exploit a weakness in an enemy line.
Historically, in many countries horse artillery developed a cavalry-like air of being an elite force. This attitude is entirely understandable. Dragging heavy artillery pieces across country at the gallop is an inherently dangerous thing to do, even without people shooting at you!
Details
This unit is unique to the French and has the advantage of being just as manoevurable as the 3 and 6-pounder horse artillery available to other nations, but packing much more of a punch. Whilst it is also more expensive, it is capable standing up to heavier foot artillery batteries for a limited time and will outgun any 12-pounder cannon. As such, one should replace one's smaller horse artillery units when these guns become available, if one can afford to do so.