The struggle continues...
Now decided to have two main types of infantry basing which will allow 3 main types of infantry to be represented.
One figure stands for 25 men in 3 ranks . Two figures depth can be 4 to 6 ranks in all.
Each battalion to have four bases which allow representation of formation.
DEEP FORMATION
Deeper formations often including pikes. 4 bases 45mm front 60mm depth with 6 figues on each in two ranks.Typically, Swedish, Russian, French.
LINEAR FORMATION
Linear formation for heightened firepower, 4 bases of 90mm front 30mm depth 6 figures in one rank. Typically, British, Dutch, Prussian.
Refinements seem to be too difficult/problematic to differentiate. The basis is to allow firepower advantage for linear tactics and close combat advantages for deeper formations.
With these basings a linear formation will have more figures firing than pike armed units and can fight double the number of enemy battalions on an equal basis. Platoon firing can be awarded some advantage too.
Each base must have an NCO/Officer figure which can be removed when the base suffers a 'Command hit.'
Each formation has a command base of an officer, a battalion flag and a musician.
Regimental command bases should have a colonel on a horse, regimental colour and national colour also. (single battalion regiments have only the regimental command., multiple battalion regiments have the command base 'with' a battalion.)
HORSE: Historical variations are chaotic. This is a compromise for sanity's sake.
A troop on a base 75mm by 60mm deep is 5 figures in one rank. A squadron is two troop bases with a command base of two figures : officer and ensign. Troops need an officer figure to allow for command hits.
GUNS : 45mm by depth as necessary. With one figure plus 1 for every gun represented in the battery.
Far away on the shores of a turbulent grey sea under a brooding, steely sky, cavalry hooves and cannonfire shake the earth and the rumble of distant musketfire drifts into earshot on the biting wind
INFO, NOTES AND THINKING ALOUD
"Have not the wisest men in all ages had their Hobby-Horses;-their coins, cockle-shells, drums, trumpets, fiddles, pallets, maggots and their butterflies?"
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