Azor & VioletRook
Azor Azor
I’ve been mapping out the most efficient way to stretch a week’s worth of supplies—food, ammo, medicine—while keeping the risk to zero. Care to crunch the numbers with me?
VioletRook VioletRook
Sure, let’s break it down into a 7‑day table. 1. List each item: food (cans, protein bars, water), ammo, med kit (bandages, antibiotics, pain relievers). 2. Note daily consumption per person: 3 meals = 3 food units, 2–3 shots of ammo for defense, 1 med kit use if injury. 3. Divide each item by 7 to get a “daily allotment” and round up to the nearest whole unit. 4. Add a 10 % buffer for unexpected events—extra 1–2 food units, 2 spare ammo rounds, and a spare bandage. 5. Keep a simple spreadsheet with columns: Item, Total, Daily Use, Daily Buffer, Remaining. 6. Verify totals: if any column drops below zero before day 7, adjust by reallocating from less critical items. That gives you a zero‑risk baseline and a quick reference to re‑balance if circumstances change. Let me know what numbers you have, and we’ll plug them in.
Azor Azor
Give me the totals you have for each item and I’ll run the numbers—no fluff, just the facts.
VioletRook VioletRook
Food: 21 canned goods, 21 protein bars, 49 liters of water. Ammo: 70 rounds. Medicine: 14 bandages, 7 antibiotic doses, 7 pain relievers.
Azor Azor
Food Total:42 Daily use:3 Daily buffer:1 Total per day:4 Remaining after 7 days:14 Water Total:49 Daily use:6 Daily buffer:1 Total per day:7 Remaining after 7 days:7 Ammo Total:70 Daily use:9 Daily buffer:1 Total per day:10 Remaining after 7 days:0 Bandages Total:14 Daily use:0 Daily buffer:1 Total per day:1 Remaining after 7 days:7 Antibiotics Total:7 Daily use:0 Daily buffer:0 Total per day:0 Remaining after 7 days:7 Pain relievers Total:7 Daily use:0 Daily buffer:0 Total per day:0 Remaining after 7 days:7 That’s the baseline. Adjust usage if you hit a casualty or run low on water or ammo. Keep the sheet up‑to‑date.
VioletRook VioletRook
Looks good. Ammo will run out on day seven, so you’ll need a resupply or another defense plan. Water is tight too—keep an eye on that. Anything else you want to tweak?
Azor Azor
You’re right about the ammo. Set up a fallback—like a perimeter with a tripwire or a secondary bunker—so we’re not forced to run the last round off. For water, bring a purification kit; that’ll let us stretch the 49 liters a bit. I’ll add a “clean‑up water” column to the sheet and flag any dip over 10 %. And maybe keep the extra antibiotics as a reserve in case of multiple injuries; we don’t want to run out of that. Anything else?
VioletRook VioletRook
Sounds solid. Just remember antibiotics degrade if the bunker gets too hot—keep a temperature log. Also track daily usage in the sheet; a one‑day spike could blow the buffer. Good plan.
Azor Azor
Log the temp, flag anything above 25 °C, and swap the antibiotics into a cooler. I’ll add a “temp” column to the sheet and set a rule to move doses to the backup if it hits a spike. Done.Log the temp, flag anything above 25 °C, and swap the antibiotics into a cooler. I’ll add a “temp” column to the sheet and set a rule to move doses to the backup if it hits a spike. Done.