kzt wrote:Jonathan_S wrote:But more extensive and realistic testing could have turned up these flaws before they were exposed in combat. But that's hard to get budget for, can be tricky to set up, and test that don't provide conclusive results due to something going wrong often end up as black marks against the officers in charge. (So there's a subtle, or not so subtle, perverse incentive against doing more tests because it more changes to get an 'oh shit' while tests that work, even ones the find problems are less likely to gain 'attaboys'.
But luckily in the Honorverse you apparently don't have to worry about those sorts of things, and you can deploy into combat the first generation of missiles made by newly trained people on newly assembled productions lines using new fabrication gear controlled by newly designed and constructed fire control systems running just written code deployed on newly built computer hardware. Which is what they seem to plan to do at Beowulf.
What makes you think any of the above occurs? As a matter of fact, I'd argue that you've seen a lot more evidence that successful warfighting systems are the result of long,
intense development and
testing in the Honorverse than in the vast majority of military science fiction
Present Manticoran technology is the end result of R&D programs (and
skads of testing, for which the budget has
always been available, thank you) which began before Honor Harrington was even born. The Mycroft system planned for Beowulf uses
no new technology; it takes existing technology, whose parameters are thoroughly known, and applies it in a static role rather than as deployed (and rigorously tested and proven)
mobile systems. Its components --
all of its components--- have been tested rigorously
in combat, as well as in the developmental process. The components may be being
built in new production lines in Beowulf (and in some instances, where the tech falls within the existing infrastructure's reach, the RoH), but those facilities have been producing similar
types of hardware for a long, long time, and the people supervising the introduction of the new hardware are Manticorans who are
thoroughly familiar with the new systems and how they're
built. not just how they're actually used in combat.
When the pod-laying concept was introduced, it had been thoroughly tested before the first capital ship using it was laid down, and some weaknesses had been detected in actual combat (and corrected) along the way. (
Honor Among Enemies. anyone?) The
Shrike and the CLAC were the result of developmental programs (and testing) which went back over
15 years and incorporated combat experience. (Again,
Honor Among Enemies). They were also thrown into combat for the first time when a dreadnought-sized ship built expressly
as an evaluation/development test bed found itself unexpectedly in the middle of a flipping battle no one on Manticore's side had seen coming. Before Apollo was first deployed in combat it had been thoroughly tested --- in live-fire exercises, as well as computer simulations. The RMN's quandary wasn't whether or not it represented a tested and proven technology, but rather that the production facilities to which you refer were still in the process of spinning up and availability numbers would be low, meaning that it would be impossible to deploy it
generally.
If you really want me to, I can write you an entire novel about the testing procedures employed in the Honorverse. I can also go step by step through the combination of tested technologies in new applications or show you the Manty supervisors and trainers working with the Beowulfan labor force to put new hardware into prodouction. Unfortunately, only the true techno wonks among us --- like the people who are discussing how wet-navy battleships were designed on a thread which began as a teaser/present for one of my fans --- would buy the book to see it!
This is sort of like the question about where AI is in the Honorverse.
Brilliant software is fricking
everywhere in the Honorverse; it's just running in the background. I've explained elsewhere why I chose not to include genuinely
self-aware AI in the Honorverse's DNA for storytelling reasons. (God knows I've used it enough in
other stories/series!) I've explained the in-universe the rationale for it (which, admittedly, is driven at least as much by those storytelling constraints as by my reservations about the more optimistic claims in favor of its eventual evolution). I haven't chosen to tell the story of the uncountable failed efforts to
develop artificial sentience in-universe because there was no driving need to do so and because it would be way, way outside the everyday thoughts and experiences of the characters in the book. Sort of like the R&D to develop the LED is of such driving interest to the majority of 21st century humans.