dreamrider wrote:Folks here have mentioned/implied that compensators are necessary for W. sail travel in grav waves and in wormholes. Do we really have textev for that? I couldn't find any.
We do know that somehow ships and crews ARE able to survive grav wave entry and sailing at effective accelerations that are nominally vastly greater than their compensator ratings. I assume that this is either because gravitic 'medium' of the grav wave is 'flowing' in such a way that the relative acceleration is within the limits of the available compensator, or because the compensator is somehow able to operate much more efficiently in the medium of the grav wave.
The increased acceleration in a grav wave is due to increased compensator efficiency -- a grav wave is a "gravity sump" many orders of magnitude larger than an impeller wedge.
Th relevant portions from More Than Honor:
The Warshawski Sail also made it possible to "crack the wall" between hyper bands with much greater impunity. Breaking into a higher hyper band was (and is) still no bed of roses, and ships occasionally come to grief in the transition even today, but a Warshawski Sail ship inserts itself into a grav wave going in the right direction and rides it through, rather like an aircraft riding an updraft. This access to the higher bands meant the first generation Warshawski Sail could move a starship at an apparent velocity of just over 800 c, but an upper limit on velocity remained, created by the range capability of the vessel's grav wave detectors. In the higher bands, the grav waves were both more powerful and tightly-spaced due to the increasingly stressed nature of hyper-space in those regions. This meant that the five-light-second detection range of the original Warshawski offered insufficient warning time to venture much above the gamma bands, thus imposing the absolute speed limitation. In addition, the problems of acceleration remained. The Warshawski Sail could be adjusted by decreasing the strength of the field, thus allowing a greater proportion of the grav wave's power to "leak" through it, to hold acceleration down to something a human body could tolerate, but the old bugaboo of "g forces" remained a problem for the next century or so.
Then, in 1384 pd, a physicist by the name of Shigematsu Radhakrishnan added another major breakthrough in the form of the inertial compensator. The compensator turned the grav wave (natural or artificial) associated with a vessel into a sort of "inertial sump," dumping the inertial forces of acceleration into the grav wave and thus exempting the vessel's crew from the g forces associated with acceleration. Within the limits of its efficiency, it completely eliminated g force, placing an accelerating vessel in a permanent state of internal zero-gee, but its capacity to damp inertia was directly proportional to the power of the grav wave around it and inversely proportional to both the volume of the field and the mass of the vessel about which it was generated. The first factor meant that it was far more effective for starships than for sublight ships, as the former drew upon the greater energy of the naturally occurring grav waves of hyper-space, and the second meant it was more effective for smaller ships than for larger ones. The natural grav waves of hyper-space, with their incomparably greater power, offered a much "deeper" sump than the artificial stress bands of the impeller drive, which meant that a Warshawski Sail ship could deflect vastly more g force from its passengers than one under impeller drive. In general terms, the compensator permitted humans to endure acceleration rates approaching 550 g under impeller drive and 4-5,000 g under sail, which allows hyperships to make up "bleed-off" velocity very quickly after translation. These numbers are for military compensators, which tend to be more massive, more energy and maintenance intensive, and much more expensive than those used in most merchant construction. Military compensators allow higher acceleration—and warships cannot afford to be less maneuverable than their foes—but only at the cost of penalties merchant ships as a whole cannot afford.
It is possible to sail Grav Waves in hyper without a compensator, but at greatly reduced acceleration. On the other hand, the Lenny Dets will presumable mount a "streak drive" hyper generator and be able to utilize the highest hyperbands where they would be immune to pursuit or interception.
Given the acceleration disadvantage the spider drive incurs in normal space, I don't know that the designers would not accept the same sort of acceleration disadvantage in Hyper. There's no reason they should unless space for the hardware isn't available or the Lenny Dets are so big that a compensator isn't significantly better than grav plates.