Helping with Adventurer Party Management

Episode 476: Craftsmen Loading Bricks

"Model...?

The next day, the two rapidly summoned technicians could not hide their confusion in the officials making odd demands, that is, in my words.

"That's right. New technologies require validation and experimentation. I'm not suspicious of your arms. But this is a big budget and a lot of people, and I want you to produce a small facility to verify and explain what a triple water truck will look like."

"It's a way of not asking much"

Abel on the cat back answers.

Looking back diagonally, Claudio nodded as well.

"Why? The efficiency and accuracy of the work would also be different if everyone shared the completion diagram. Besides, a machine is something you don't know what's going to happen until you actually make it and try to move it. If you can wash out the challenges in advance with a small model, it will result in significant budget savings. Before you actually make it, you can modify the design."

"I know that's especially true..."

"The aristocrats don't even want to offer a single piece of copper coin, other than what actually helps them."

Claudio supplements Abel's mouthfeel.

"What about the church?

"The circumstances of the church are similar."

Don't you want to spend money on unseen things, surveys and plans?

I know how you feel, but if you don't invest in the development of know-how, you end up with an extra budget.

Projects involving large numbers need to be particularly corrupt to ensure that participants remain party conscious.

Speaking of this flour mill project, I am proud to say to the supporter (sponsor), Priest Nicolo, that he is preaching the benefits to be gained from the territory, and that the new officials, starting with Claudio, have a high sense of participation (commitment) as a place to gain experience in various management techniques and for the future.

But I don't feel comfortable going further.

"Now that we are at the planning stage, we are turning the business around in small numbers, but I think that if the construction starts, an unparalleled number of people will be engaged"

Civil engineering in this world depends on manpower. We're gonna need a lot of people anyway to even the land and dig the drain.

"I think it will..."

"I want those people to understand the whole business."

"Dear deputy... but, you know, they're uneducated peasants or a bunch of drifters, right? I don't think you can understand very much about the business..."

Claudio flatters my first reason.

The number of participants is expected to increase by one digit when construction actually begins and by a little while.

The degree of participation also increases the number of participants in the short term (part-time) who participate between farming tasks or just a few days as a day job.

It's impossible to explain to all those fiercely replaced humans.

I guess that's what you're trying to say.

"So you explain it in things. If you have a model, you can see it in one shot."

What we're going to make is going to take shape like this. I work to make this.

I'm not talking about brick loading craftsmen, but ideas to help them understand what they're working for are always required.

"Besides, I'm looking forward to seeing what kind of water mill I design, too."

As for the waterwheel hut, I have seen something for tourism once in the original world to some extent, but I remember it being a fairly complex installation, with a combination of wooden gear and skinned belts, etc.

Church technicians who would also have high technology in this world are looking forward to seeing what kind of water wheels they design.

If the model is well made, it may be shown to the upper ecclesiastical level.

It will be a lot easier to do in the future if the finished image you are aiming for is understood.