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Duckk
Posts: 4201
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The appendix in More Than Honor details the development of various gravitic technologies. Indeed, artificial gravity generation post-dates the compensator by 118 years (1384 vs 1502 PD).
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Shields at 50%, taunting at 100%! - Tom Pope |
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Galactic Sapper
Posts: 524
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Fair enough point. Looking back at The Universe of Honor Harrington in More than Honor, a compensator is completely ineffective above 10 million tons (9.something, anyway). So all these 20 million ton forts wouldn't bother carrying one.
Correct. Even if they had a backup compensator a 0.01 second delay in activation at 600g means everyone has either already hit a bulkhead (less than 0.3 m away) or is headed at one at better than 200 km/h (greater than 0.3 m away). Or if they were strapped in, their necks snapped as their heads tried to hit the nearest bulkhead without the rest of their body following. |
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kzt
Posts: 11360
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Unless the MAN have started to sell their new grav plates on the open market I think it’s lower than that? |
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Duckk
Posts: 4201
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MoH describes the limits of the old grav plates versus the Alignment’s improved ones. “Old” grav plate technology is capable of reducing acceleration at better than 99% efficiency such that the felt acceleration is 1 G.
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Shields at 50%, taunting at 100%! - Tom Pope |
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cthia
Posts: 14951
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I thought the sails had to be located at the ends, which means the Alpha nodes has to follow. Which I presumed is part of what the Captain meant. Son, your mother says I have to hang you. Personally I don't think this is a capital offense. But if I don't hang you, she's gonna hang me and frankly, I'm not the one in trouble. —cthia's father. Incident in ? Axiom of Common Sense |
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tlb
Posts: 4728
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Yes, that is my reading of what the Pearls says. |
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Joat42
Posts: 2164
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If it was possible I guess we would have seen ships with redundant compensators. But as you say, if it's feasible to have 2 compensators on a ship - if there is even a slight delay in the backup kicking in everything will be subject to 100's of gees for a very short period. I do wonder how meatbags would react to those forces, even for a couple of microseconds. But it's entirely possible that the physics behind compensators doesn't allow for redundancy. --- Jack of all trades and destructive tinkerer. Anyone who have simple solutions for complex problems is a fool. |
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tlb
Posts: 4728
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From earlier in this thread:
viewtopic.php?f=1&t=10444&start=280 |
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ThinksMarkedly
Posts: 4633
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I didn't mean redundancy, as in multiple independent systems that make compensation work. I meant as a single system with distributed emitters throughout the ship. Emitters failing is not a compensator failure. But if the compensator generator / gravity sump accommodator or whatever the central piece is called fails, the entire system fails. But I don't think that's it, though. Even though we talk about mass, it appears the limit to compensation is volume. If you could have distributed emitters, then volume shouldn't be an issue. |
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Jonathan_S
Posts: 9020
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At Cerburus Honor's little fleet pulled 150g for "half an hour" (to get the velocity and range stated, more like 35 minutes) and the grav plates cut that 30 fold (down to 5g). Now a fort probably wouldn't be comfortable to ride in at 3 - 5g; so their normal accel is probably lower. But lying down or in a half decent acceleration seat 5g is perfectly survivable. Still your combat effectiveness is likely impaired since (unlike a fighter jet) they probably wouldn't be optimized for combat under g-load. |
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