In theory, yes. In practice, no. If they could do that, they could launch missiles at enormously greater velocities than they do.Lord Skimper wrote:Also couldn't the wedge just spit the projectile out at near light speed? Plus the build up would be, for a SD 280+km.
Also it depends how fast the enemy ship is going, if they are going 0.3c and you are going 0.2c you only need 0.5c any more wouldn't make any difference. Can't go faster than 1c.
That's not the way addition of velocities work in relativity. However, you are correct that if two ships are moving at high velocity toward each other, you won't need as much additional velocity. On the other hand, if the two ships are moving that fast toward each other, their combined motions mean that grasers will effectively be even more powerful. It will appear to the target ship that the beam is considerably more energetic.
Didn't consider sidewalls. Do ships flying into a system jig and jog or just fly in throat wide open? Jigging and jogging would slow them down, no?
If one ship is chasing another, the lead will be firing down the throat of the tail while the tail fires up the kilt of the lead. But most battle aren't fought as a stern chase. One or both ships can jig back and forth, usually so that they can fire their broadsides rather than just their chase weapons. We saw this in the battle of Fearless vs. Sirius. The ship in the worse position will often try to keep the sidewall interposed, to prevent the unobstructed shot.
But most battles are not stern chases. Usually when ships get into missile or beam range, they will turn their broadside (or their wedge, if they have Keyhole) so that they can fire the a lot more weapons while hiding behind the passive defenses.