Annachie wrote:Given that compensators are a work or fail device, could max mass be the same?
That you're OK until you exceed the limit then you're cactus?
I'd guess not - if they still pay attention to mass I'd expect exceeding the mass to work more like exceeding the volume (reduces acceleration) rather than exceeding the acceleration (total failure).
The one, maybe, data-point we have is the new LACs. We know they're substantially denser than normal warships. (Half the length yet twice the mass of the Highlander-class) and applying my acceleration curves they look like they
might be about 7% slower that a starship with the same generation compensator. (At introduction they were roughly 117.2% of base accel while ships of the same era were most like 125.5% of base accel)
And that's comparing their tonnage (20,000-ish tons) to startship tonnage; not their volume. (They'd be
much slower if you adjusted them to the standard .25 density before running the comparison)
Of course there's all kinds of things that might screw that up as a comparison -- we've no assurance that same years in HoS equate to same compensator generation (and in a few cases they clearly don't). The LAC's have all Beta-Squared nodes, no Alpha nodes; which might affect accel a little. There aren't a lot of data-points on ships that small so the best-fit curve might be iffy.
Still it hints that there
may be a crossover point where excess density causes accel to drop to below what a (larger) ship of that tonnage at standard density would be.
I point it out because it's the one place we've got solid acceleration numbers for something we know isn't the normal warship density of the Great Resizing.