You complained about my replies being un-followable because I didn't quote you. Guess why? That's because I was answering Ozarck's points in order, and got ninja'd, hence them not making sense to you.
I didn't complain about your replies not quoting me, I complained about your replies not quoting
Oz. It's less difficult to follow the conversation when you're actually responding to me, but it's extremely difficult when you aren't; that's part of why I made a deal out of it.
You're also still not spoilering your statements, which is honestly kinda rude. A lot of people really don't want to see this. Some people might want to read about pokemon instead.
Holy crap, man, you're going back and force arguing about the stability of WWII explosives like nothing else! Did you even CHECK the Seydlitz fire off of Dogger Bank? That shows how REAL explosives behave under fire----and cordite, naval-gun propellant, is nastier than most. Much more sensitive.
You do realize that that's only one example, which you're basing your whole argument on, right? And it's not even the same stuff; sure, cordite might be more sensitive, but why not talk about instances involving
actual aircraft bombs?
It's mostly irrelevant anyway. This all boils down to whether Piecewise thinks the munitions bunkers are going to explode, and knowing him, I think they will. I don't think it's all the unbelievable even in reality--most certainly from the perspective of confused and scared grunts--but if you'd like you can continue to try and convince me. Or Oz, I guess, if he decides to humor you.
Once again: That satchel charge would've blown the whole bunker to BITS. It contains MUCH more explosives than your usual primer/ignition charge in, say, an AIRCRAFT BOMB.
Do you... think that there's no armoring against shock on bombs, whatsoever? Yeah, the satchel charge is much more powerful, but it also isn't underneath the casing, and jammed right up against the main charge. I agree that if placed directly on the bomb, it's gonna cause a sympathetic detonation, but if just jammed somewhere at random... maybe not. It partially depends on how well the bunker is built, and I am forced to admit that we both have described many ways in which this bunker is poorly built.
As for cooking off, no. No, and no. There's no direct application of flame right now, remember? There IS fire outside the bunker,
...Which you have proof for?
Why would the bunker have a ceiling, made of stuff which can burn, be seperated from the contents by another sturdy ceiling which will not burn? The bunkers are certainly covered by enough flame that such a ceiling or an internal fire are basically required. Either soon leads to the other if possible, anyway.
There IS fire outside the bunker, but it'd have to get to temperatures in excess of 300 degrees, if I recall Mythbusters correctly, to start cooking off even small bullets (With less sort-of insulating metal).
Wonderful source. Yes, I doubt cartridges would cook off when near exposed flame, but if they're in wooden storage crates (yes, they stored ammo in wood crates during WWII), I think that might provide enough heat. Fire be hot, yo.
As for the full quote, now you're just picking at straws, aren't you?
Here's a prime example of a place quotes would be simply
wonderful. From my recollection of what I said, it most certainly wasn't picking at straws, it was one of the core points I've been trying to make. I don't feel like going back to check though, so whatever. If you wanna make this more annoying, I don't have to bite...
That is a POSSIBILITY I am explaining. It makes no more sense for you to say than your original argument did. I'm not arguing that that's CERTAIN to happen, just that it's far more LIKELY to happen
The semantics don't really matter here. If anyone who doesn't follow your advice is an idiot/sociopath, the difference between you saying "It's most likely to be the best course of action" and "It's definitely the best course of action" is academic.
I also kinda want to point out that "You
probably won't all die, and you're worth less than those people anyway." isn't a particularly persuasive argument.
time that reinforcements are using to get closer and time that the remaining Germans are using to get re-assembled, for whatever it's worth.
...An argument you have repeatedly failed to provide support for, and have mostly given absurd traits like including a full armored brigade...
I suspect that after the explosions ALL the firefighters are retreating in case the fire reached the base itself (Which would be bad for them, for HIGHLY obvious reasons), which means that in the probably event in which the bunker(s) do NOT explode, the remaining members of the 888th would have wasted a lot of time, so they'd be walking back into a worse situation than if they stay.
Yeah, yeah, you make a fair point here. I've changed my opinion from "We should retreat then come if from a better angle" to "We should either ransack the remaining solid buildings while the enemy is still in disarray, or just retreat immediately."
I'm not completely sure what you think we're supposed to be doing, to be honest. Maybe we actually agree, if you aren't encouraging going back for any remaining kids? That'd be kinda funny.