tlb wrote:I am quite certain that the author was insistent that there would not be a purely automatic transit of a wormhole. So the sample is NOT biased; that is how the author intends to write every wormhole transit.
I think the reasoning is as follows: if a wormhole can be transitioned in a purely automatic way then there is nothing stopping the construction of a drone than can make a transition and he is adamant that such things will not appear in the Honorverse.
And all of the steps in those manual transits could be automated, even with 1990s technology. It may not be safe with that technology, but today it certainly would be.
So the author has decreed it doesn't happen. Fine, we can't argue with that. I'm still saying it's mostly automatic. The captain and the engineer are reading the numbers off a computer console and there's a green bar showing how healthy the transit is, and a needle showing the optimal energy readings for running the hypergenerator. It's foolproof enough that a cadet could make a transit. After all, private ships like couriers and yachts do it all the time.
Either that or the retelling of the manual transit left a lot out. When I said that airliners can land themselves, I oversimplified it: we have the technology to do it, but we don't. The process of setting up an autoland system, especially when the conditions aren't ideal, is not trivial. There are a lot of steps to achieve the right conditions; only specially-trained pilots (and then usually only a captain) are even allowed to attempt this, because they have to monitor a lot of things in case the autopilot gets it wrong, then take over and execute a go-around.
[In the extremely-unlikely and never-happened case of every competent pilot eating the fish dinner and the steward(ess) having to ask if anyone can land the plane, a lay person could be talked into doing it with the autoland. The Mythbusters did it about a decade ago (in the episode Adam Savage got confused about the "don't think" warning from the cockpit).]
This scenario is actually more likely. All we've heard of hyper transits is basically "push a button", but the physics of it must be very complex. That means there are smart systems in the background handling most of the tasks, so the crew aboard the ship don't have to handle everything. The automatics take care of everything, so long as it's within parameters. A wormhole transit shouldn't be too different.