Welcome to the TWC Wiki! You are not logged in. Please log in to the Wiki to vote in polls, change skin preferences, or edit pages. See HERE for details of how to LOG IN.

Difference between revisions of "Dhow (ETW Unit)"

From TWC Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
(Created page with "{{Unit|image=Image:Dhow.png|Class=Trading Ship|Men=11|Guns=1.5|Recruitable From=Trading Port/Commercial Port/Commercial Basin/ Global Trading Company|Region=Worldwide|Recruit...")
 
Line 13: Line 13:
 
*[[Image:Xx.jpg|25px]] [[Marathas (ETW Faction)|Maratha Confederacy]]
 
*[[Image:Xx.jpg|25px]] [[Marathas (ETW Faction)|Maratha Confederacy]]
 
*[[Image:Mughal_Flag.png|25px]] [[Mughal Empire (ETW Faction) |Mughal Empire]]
 
*[[Image:Mughal_Flag.png|25px]] [[Mughal Empire (ETW Faction) |Mughal Empire]]
 +
 +
[[Category:Trade Ships]]

Revision as of 15:18, 7 December 2010

Dhow (ETW Unit)
Dhow.png
Class Trading Ship
Unit Size
Weaponry
Morale
Melee Attack
Ranged Attack
Defence
Charge Bonus
Accuracy
Range
Ammunition
Region Worldwide
Recruitment Cost 500
Upkeep Cost 50
Turns to Build
Unit Limit
Building Requirements
Technology Requirements
Attributes


Overview

The design of the dhow has remained unchanged over hundreds of years; it simply doesn’t need to be improved. Used throughout the Arab world as trading boats, pirates also favour them because of their good handling, and relatively high speed. That said, the design may well be Indian in origin, later adopted by Arab seafarers. A well-handled dhow has the advantage over many European rigged ships, in that it can stay out of the firing footprint of most lumbering ships and yet is quick enough to be able to escape in even the lightest of breezes.

The lateen (or triangular) sail is also ancient design. It is not, however, perfect for all conditions. The canted lateen yardarm is difficult to handle in stormy conditions with a small crew. This may explain why the sailing rig is favoured in the Mediterranean, the Red Sea and around the Arabian peninsular rather than the Atlantic. The construction method of stitching the planks together is a unique feature of the dhow.

Historically, Europeans tended to use the term “dhow” indiscriminately to mean any vessel rigged with lateen sails. An Arab sailor would make a much finer distinction, based on the hull configuration.


Factions