Cool thanks for digging that up.JohnRoth wrote:The earliest reference I can find to "micro-fusion" reactors is in At All Costs, where it's said that they were developed for Ghost Rider, and that the drones, EW platforms and so forth all use them. They're not just for missiles.
I do still wonder if they're basically scaled down (and less rad shielded) versions of one of the two reactor types we've already seen of it they invented a 3rd basic approach in order to achieve micro=fusion reactors.
We know modern starships use a grav pinch (Changer of Worlds: Ms Midshipwoman Harrington, Storm from the Shadows, House of Steel) And HoS provided a bit more and an acronym/name for them; while comparing them to Grayson's pre-alliance reactor designs.
House of Steel wrote:Simply put, pre-Alliance Grayson fusion plants were not gravitically/electro-magnetically compressed (aka GRAVMAKs). They operated purely on electromagnetic principles and were enormous when compared to a modern GRAVMAK of similar output.
And small craft don't use that gravity based reactor (Ashes of Victory
Ashes of Victory wrote:The little hip-pocket fusion plants we put into small craft couldn't even begin to power an all-up wedge for a ship the size of a LAC. Which is just as well, because they use old-fashioned mag bottle technology and laser-fired fusing that's not a lot more advanced than they were using back on Old Earth Ante Diaspora. We've made a hell of a lot of advances since then, of course, in order to shoehorn the plants down to fit into pinnaces, but the way they're built puts a low absolute ceiling on their output.
My personal speculation is that the GRAVMAK, specifically the gravity portion didn't scale efficiently into something so low power and physically small as a pinnace. That also how I rationalize why LAC fusion plants were so inefficient; the GRAVMAK design probably started hiting scaling problems somewhere around the power needs of a CL and to get smaller than that you presumably started running into serious diminishing returns. Maybe keeping the gravity pinch powered up and stabilized has a fixed minimum energy requirement, regardless of how little power the reactor is generating, so as you need less power a greater and greater percentage of the output is being eaten just keeping the reactor going (making it a fuel hog compared to its usable power output). But if my speculation is correct then I don't think micro-fusion would be using GRAVMAK tech; conversely if we do discover they're using ultra-miniaturized GRAVMAKs then my speculation is wrong and there must be some other reason LAC reactors are such fuel hogs.