I think that the ability of a sidewall to blunt beam weapons attacks might be less mysterious than we think. First and foremost, the sidewall might multiply the divergence angle of the incoming beam. Given the hints that we have from Weber combined with known physics, the diverence angle of a Graser will be much smaller than of a laser so Grasers would be better at penatrating Sidewalls then lasers. However; Weber also alludes to the difficulty of "focusing a hot emitter" in the graser system which suggests that the optical performance of Grasers falls far short of diffraction limitation. Finally; the fact that very large yield warheads mounted on SKMs were once used to "burn out" sidewalls suggests that there is a maximum energy threshold above which a sidewall ceases to be effective.
A Phased Array Graser would have a much lower divergence angle than a normal graser, laser or X-ray laser that a sidewall could multiply. The energy density would also be hellishly intense, exceeding the gigaton yield sidewall burners that had once been in use.
Now keep in mind that I'm not arguing that the above is the way things are or the way things out to be. I'm simply suggesting that this might be the way things are in Weber's Honorverse or the way things reasonably could be if Weber decides to tweak the rules of the Honorverse a bit. I wouldn't consider this to be a Deux Machina (someone wil nail me on the spelling) abuse that often times motivates me to throw an offending book across the room.
Keep in mind that Phased Array Graser technology is probably a low mass penalty modification of any ship that has a multiple graser armament. You will also note that all of the SD(P)s as well as the BC(P)s, NIKE BC(L)s, SAGANAMI Cs and ROLLAND DDs have all Grasers rather than the traditional mixed Graser/Laser energy armament in their broadside and chase armament. You will also note that that the key components that would destinguish a Phased Array Graser from a normal Graser installation would be a central, low power Gamma Ray Laser oscillator, beam splitter, wave guides (or just evacuated channels), and phase shifter arrays mounted on the breach end of the main Graser mounts. (yes, I know that we don't know how to build Graser mirrors and lens or Graser waveguides or Graser phase shifters, but I'm assuming that Honorverse Tech can) All of this would be rather unobtrusive so that it would seem reasonable that most crew didn't notice the sytems, or understand what they were, and the officers in the know wouldn't talk about them in normal conversation. Also, these systems are something that Manticore might be able to produce and retrofit with the limited manufacturing capacity that survived Oyster Bay.
The end result here is that Phased Array Graser / Long Range Laser technology might be a force multiplier which would allow Manticoran ships to engage and defeat SLN as well as other ships without having to deplete the finite supply of SKMs that presumably will be needed to defeat the Mesan fleet.
solbergb wrote:There are two reasons lasers are ineffective against sidewalls at greater than half a million clicks.
One is just that the sidewall's ability to bend light seems to get a lot more effective with range from the emitter. This is why "knife range" improves penetration of a shrike attack, why relatively weak laser-head beams punch through sidewalls at 30km that require hugely powerful beam weapons at 300km to get to the armor.
I don't know why that is, but sidewall effects are magic, they work however David says they do. It doesn't seem to matter how powerful your beam weapon is, at greater than 2 light seconds, it does squat against even a relatively weak sidewall. This might actually be a targeting problem to some extent, it is hard to tell.
The second issue is targeting. The wedge messes up sensors and you don't really know where in the giant wedge the relatively tiny ship actually resides. Close range FTL sensors would help with that quite a bit, but they don't solve the problem of the ship moving a large distance between the time the beam fires and the time it arrives on the scene. Ships that accelerate at multiple hundred G's can shift position a lot in even a couple seconds.
I don't think it is as simple as having a retargeting "mirror" (I assume some kind of gravitic lens) to shift the beam at the target. That means you are really shooting at the sensor, accurately enough to hit the grav lens (and not splash the sensor), and that the lens itself can very precisely aim an incoming beam from any angle to any other angle.