thinkstoomuch wrote:Snip...
Do we know if it is even possible to raise the wedge on one fusion plant?
...Snip
Yes we do know if it is possible to raise the wedge on an Honorverse impeller drive ship with one fusion plant.
The answer is both yes and (possibly) no.
At least in regards to merchantman impeller wedge starships, definitely yes:
Honor Among Enemies, Chapter 5 wrote:That was the biggest weakness of Trojan Horse, for the Caravan class were true merchantmen—big, slow, bumbling freighters, without armor, without military-grade drives, without internal compartmentalization or a warship's sophisticated damage control remotes. Their hulls were the flattened, double-ended spindles of any impeller drive vessel, but they'd been laid out to maximize cargo-handling efficiency, without a warship's "hammer head" ends, where the hull flared back out to mount powerful chase armaments. They'd also been built with only one power plant apiece which, like many of their vital systems, was deliberately placed close to the skins of their hulls to facilitate access for maintenance and repair. Unfortunately, that also exposed it to hostile fire, and though Vulcan had added a second fusion plant deep inside Wayfarer's hull, no one in her right mind would ever consider her a "proper" warship.
Italics are the author's, boldface is my emphasis.
For warship impeller wedge
star ships (not LACs), possibly yes and no. And for LACs, definitely yes:
Ashes of Victory, Chapter 13 wrote:"Of course, the designers can cut some corners when they design a LAC. For one thing, they don't try to build in a power plant which can meet all requirements out of current generating capacity. Ton-for-ton, LACs have enormous capacitor rings, much larger than anything else's, even an SD. They're a lot smaller in absolute terms, naturally, given the difference in size between the ships involved, but most energy-armed LACs rely on the capacitor rings to power their offensive armament, and a lot of them rely on the capacitors even for their point-defense clusters. And not even a superdreadnought has enough onboard power generation to bring its wedge up initially without using its capacitors. Just maintaining it once it is up, even with the energy-siphon effect when it twists over into hyper, requires a huge investment in power, and initiating the impeller bands in the first place raises the power requirement exponentially. So even when they're not doing anything else, most warships tend to have at least one fusion plant on-line to charge up their capacitor rings . . . and, of course, a LAC only has one power plant, and just keeping it up and running requires its own not insubstantial power investment.
Italics are the author's, boldface is my emphasis.
For pinannces and missiles, the answer is definitely yes.
Ashes of Victory, Chapter 13 wrote:"But like you, I was thinking about the hardware side of his report and wishing the Board had been given a chance to see it before it issued its official conclusions," the citizen admiral went on. "Not that it would have convinced the doubters . . . or even me—fully, I mean—I suppose. It just doesn't seem possible that even the Manties could squeeze a fusion plant, and a full set of beta nodes, down into a LAC hull and then find room to cram in a godawful graser like the one Diamato described, as well!"
"I've never really understood that," Honeker said, admitting a degree of technical ignorance no "proper" people's commissioner would display. "I mean, we put fusion plants into pinnaces, and isn't a LAC just a scaled-up pinnace, when all's said and done?"
"Um." Tourville scratched an eyebrow while he considered the best way to explain. "I can see why you might think that," he acknowledged after a moment, "but it's not just a matter of scale. Or, rather, it is a matter of scale, in a way, but one in which the difference is so great as to create a difference in kind, as well.
"A pinnace has a far weaker wedge than any regular warship or merchantman. It's enormously smaller, for one thing, not more than a kilometer in width, and less powerful. 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.
"Even the biggest pinnace or assault shuttle comes in at well under a thousand tons, though, and a worthwhile LAC has to be in the thirty- to fifty-thousand-ton range just to pack in its impellers and any armament at all. Remember that courier boats in the same size range don't carry any weapons or defenses and just barely manage to find someplace to squeeze in a hyper generator. A LAC may be smaller than a starship, but it still has to be able to achieve high acceleration rates (which means a military grade compensator), produce sidewalls, power its weapons—and find places to mount them—and generally act like a serious warship, or else people would simply ignore it. Which means that, like any starship, LACs need modern grav-fusing plants to maintain the power levels they require. And there are limits on how small you can make one of those."
The citizen vice admiral twitched a shrug.
Italics are the author's, boldface is my emphasis.
Single drive missiles have always been capacitor powered, as were the first generations of MDMs and the IAN's DDMs. Later RMN and GSN MDMs and DDMs were fusion powered with only one micro fusion power plant.
And for courier boats, which have military grade drives and inertial compensators, we can infer the answer as yes. Looking at the relevant portions of the last quote above:
Ashes of Victory, Chapter 13 wrote:"Even the biggest pinnace or assault shuttle comes in at well under a thousand tons, though, and a worthwhile LAC has to be in the thirty- to fifty-thousand-ton range just to pack in its impellers and any armament at all. Remember that courier boats in the same size range don't carry any weapons or defenses and just barely manage to find someplace to squeeze in a hyper generator.
Italics are the author's, boldface is my emphasis.
Given that quote comparing the size of worthwhile LACs to courier boats, and the comparison of the equipment they carry:
LAC
Beta (or Beta-squared) nodes
No Alpha nodes
Military grade inertial compensator
No hyper generator
Sidewall generators
Armament
One fusion (or fission) power plant
Hydrogen fuel bunkerage (for fusion powered LACs)
Courier boat
Military grade Beta (or Beta-squared) nodes
Military grade Alpha nodes
Military grade inertial compensator
Military grade hyper generator
No sidewall generators
No armament
At least one fusion power plant
Hydrogen fuel bunkerage
Given the comparison, does anyone think that a courier boat has the mass and volume to squeeze in a spare fusion power plant? We've seen how cramped these vessels are for the crew in Echoes of Honor,
to the point where the courier boat's captain's bunk has a padded ceiling to keep them from getting concussions if they sit up quickly without ducking their head.
I submit that there is just no way that a courier boat could carry two fusion power plants. They just don't have the mass/volume to spare.