tlb wrote:tlb wrote:The crossing into the upper level bands is unsafe for any ship without a sail, even those without a wedge. Without a sail the early ships were limited to the first three bands; the quotes make that quite clear. So for any ship to make use of the streak drive, it has to have sails. Not even a spider-drive ship can go too far up the bands without them.
Jonathan_S wrote:I still think you're reading too much into that one bit of text. Nothing else we've seen in the novels has talked about having to find a grav wave in order to climb into (or out of) the Delta - Theta bands; but we see ships entering and leaving those bands.
You have misread the text I presented; it does not say anything about forcing you to find a gravity wave in order to translate. Instead it is saying the boundaries between bands are dangerous in and of themselves; that is why hitting the iota wall as Truman did in
Honor of the Queen was so dangerous. So reread this text paying attention to the "dimensional shear" which happens when you transition from one band to another as a property of the boundary between the bands:
The second problem was that the interfaces between any two hyper bands are regions of highly unstable and powerful energy flows, creating the "dimensional shear" which had destroyed so many early hyperships, and dimensional shear becomes more violent as band levels increase. Moreover, even the relatively "safe" lower bands which could be reliably reached were characterized by powerful energy surges and flows—currents, almost—of highly-charged particles and warped gravity waves. Adequate shielding could hold the radiation effects in check, but a grav shear within any band could rip the strongest ship to pieces.
So in order to make use of the streak drive, a ship has to have sails in order to cross the upper band walls.
I'm aware of the dimensional shear - but the text does not say that sails are the solution to it. Truman's light cruiser had sails, as did every other ship that had ever tried to crack the Iota wall.
Mission of Honor wrote:Everyone had known it was theoretically possible to go even higher, attain a still higher apparent normal-space velocity, yet no one had ever managed to design a ship which could crack the iota wall and survive. Incredible amounts of research had been invested in efforts to do just that, especially in the earlier days of hyper travel, but with a uniform lack of success. In the last few centuries, efforts to beat the iota barrier had waned, until the goal had been pretty much abandoned as one of those theoretically possible but practically unobtainable concepts.
But the Mesan Alignment hadn’t abandoned it, and finally, after the better part of a hundred T-years of dogged research, they’d found the answer. It was, in many ways, a brute force approach, and it wouldn’t have been possible even now without relatively recent advances (whose potential no one else seemed to have noticed) in related fields. And even with those other advances, it had almost doubled the size of conventional hyper generators. But it worked. Indeed, they’d broken not simply the iota wall, but the kappa wall, as well.
The solution was a better hyper generation.
Which is exactly what let ships, at some point after Travis Long's time, crack the Delta wall. Again the ships of his era that couldn't survive the dimensional shear of the Delta wall
were equipped with sails -- because almost immediately after they were invented every hyper capable ship carried sails. But that wasn't enough to safely crack that wall.
And sorry, I didn't fully explain my reasoning. Sails, to the best of my knowledge, only do something when:
1) entering a grav wave
2) traveling in a grav wave
3) in the entrace or exit lane of a wormhole, or
4) transiting a wormhole.
So if you're not translating into or out of a grav wave rigging sails should do bugger all to stabilize the ship -- and, as noted above, overcoming the ever nastier dimensional shear of the higher hyper walls is primarily done by the hyper generator.
That's why I jumped to talking about needing to find a grav wave if you were getting stabilized by a sail -- because they've got no "bite" outside something like a grav wave. However I did begger the question of whether they'd do anything by assuming that they wouldn't outside a grav wave and then saying the lack of ships finding grav waves was proof that sails weren't needed to stabilize translations. (And see below where the early warshawski sail ships
did find grav waves to ease their translations)
However More Than Honor's description of the newly invented sail is clear that it stabilizes the relative to a grav wave -- it says nothing about stabilizing it relative to a hyper wall.
More Than Honor: The Universe of Honor Harrington - (1) Background (General) wrote:That, alone, would have been sufficient to earn Warshawski undying renown, but beneficial as it was, its significance paled beside her next leap forward, for in working out her detector, Dr. Warshawski had penetrated far more deeply into the nature of the grav wave phenomenon than any of her predecessors, and she suddenly realized that it would be possible to build an impeller drive which could be reconfigured at will to project its grav waves at right angles to the generating vessel. There was no converging effect to move a pocket of normal-space, but these perpendicular grav fields could be brought into phase with the grav wave, thus eliminating the interference effect between impellers and the wave. More, the new fields would stabilize a vessel relative to the grav wave, allowing a transition into it which eliminated the traditional dangers grav shear presented to the ship's physical structure.
Riding a grav wave (and hence using a sail; because you must when within a grav wave) when cracking a hyper wall
is safer -- More Than Honor does say that. And the early hyper ships, with their far, far, less capable hyper generators seem to have used that technique as a mater of routine.
More Than Honor wrote:The Warshawski Sail also made it possible to "crack the wall" between hyper bands with much greater impunity. Breaking into a higher hyper band was (and is) still no bed of roses, and ships occasionally come to grief in the transition even today, but a Warshawski Sail ship inserts itself into a grav wave going in the right direction and rides it through, rather like an aircraft riding an updraft.
But we have seen even a ship with a badly damaged modern hyper generator (Artemis) make a translation across the Gamma wall, and later climbing back up through the Delta wall, with no wedge or sail. So even badly damaged a modern hyper generator doesn't need the help of riding a 'wave through the translation. (Sure if there happens to be one going your way you'll be riding it for safety and economy reasons anyway so you'll take that slightly smoother translation as a nice bonus -- but it does not appear to be required any longer)
And there's no indication that the Streak drive would require that assistance either. (Though, to be fair we've very little info about it at all; so there's certainly room for RFC to announce such a limitation on the Streak drive; that wouldn't contradict any of the tiny bit that's been written about it)