cthia wrote:Production facilities lost in orbit would comprise mostly military production, less a few arcane, specialized facilities that may benefit from it -- such as perhaps some esoteric medical production facilities.
I'm talking about turning the production facilities on-planet towards the war effort. Factories that have long been producing electronics, appliances, aircars, heavy equipment, hoverboards, infantry weapons, farming equipment, etc. Spoiled Manticorans can do without such luxury items for a time.
I would imagine that many Manticoran factories did take a hit, production wise, when their lucrative export business took a downswing with the closing of the wormholes and trade negatively affected with League space.
Actually, I believe civilian production was almost entirely in orbit as well. After all, they exported vast amounts of whatever they produced via the wormhole network, so the minor inconvenience of shipping down to the surface(which is easier and quicker than shipping from surface to surface anyway) is more than outweighted by the convenience in not having to haul all the stuff up from the surface.
On-planet production facilities are likely limited to agriculture and other parts of the food industry, as well as a distribution and delivery network. The Manticoran colony always had easy access to space and many reasons exist for keeping industrial manufacturing in space - low-g, asteroid mining, pollution, automation, etc.. Once they had their core stations up and building more modules onto themselves, it would have been the cheapest way by far.
Even if there are substantial numbers of planetary facilities, it's hard to see how, for example, a city-scale bakery could possibly be converted to war production. The gulf between scales is just too vast - a fully laden WW2 Yorktown-class carrier came in at around 25,000 tons. A modern Manty LAC comes in at around 17 or 21k tons.
The GA doesn't need tanks, rifles and bullets. They need starships as big as and bigger than the pyramids, firing missiles the size of small aircraft.