Kytheros wrote:Jonathan_S wrote:I think that'd depend on the effective range of Keyhole II Apollo FTL control.
The (4-stage) system defense missiles have the advantage of fighting on prepared ground, where the system will have been seeded with Mycroft FTL fire-control relay nodes -- making the inherent range limits of any single Apollo link fairly irrelevant.
Ships can't count on that same advantage. We don't have a solid number on the max useable range of Apollo - just two widely different data points.
* 3 lm (53,962,642 km) is within range
* 8 lm (143,900,380) is beyond effective range
(65,726,640 km is max continuously powered range of a Mk23)
So adding range may, or may not, be useful to them; and in my opinion they'd only add the drive if it added useful (controllable) extra range.
I'm just not sure what RFC/Bunine have the the max continuously powered range of a 4-drive MDM calculated as.
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Relativity tangent:
You can't calculated it the same way that the existing missiles seem to be done (ignoring the effects relativity) -- if you did the calculations would show terminal velocities greater than c. (oops)
Without relativity a Mk23, accelerating at 42000g for 540 seconds reaches:
65.7 million km range, at 0.81c terminal velocity (agrees with the books)
But, if I did it correctly, throwing in relativity those numbers drop to:
57.4 million km range, at 0.63c terminal velocity
But how to reconcile a 3-drive missile, calculated w/o relativity, to a 4-drive missile that can't completely ignore it isn't exactly obvious.
Particle shielding probably wouldn't support missile velocities much above .9c for very long.
Also, is it confirmed that the 4th drive is a full-up drive, and not a sprint-type drive?
I'd assume that the final stage is usually set to a higher acceleration, lower run duration configuration for terminal maneuvering.
I'd agree that 4-drive MDMs aren't going to be deployed as shipboard weapons. 3 is plenty for pretty much any conceivable battlespace. If you're shooting at somebody who you need a 4th drive run for, you should have a ballistic segment in the middle, and if you still need a 4th drive after the ballistic segment and the first 3, you should wait to close the range.
Regarding Apollo control range ... I want to say it's 4 light minutes, but I can't remember where that number is coming from. Something connected to Apollo was 4 light minutes.
Whatever range Apollo has, it's a long way to go, and anybody without Apollo - which is going to take a long time to duplicate - even assuming they have MDMs, is going to have bad accuracy, and probably won't want to start shooting until they can close the range.
AHA! I remember where I got 4 light minutes from - Storm From the Shadows, Chapter 13 - Mike Henke's battlecruiser squadron is running an exercise where they're SD(P)s and using Apollo. 4.4 light minutes is within Apollo control range. The targets were 82-ish million kilometers away.
Call Apollo range limits around 5-6 light minutes. Unless the other side has Apollo too, even with MDMs, they're going to have an appallingly bad day at that kind of range; they're looking at a 10 minute communications cycle, unless they have Ghost Rider/FTL recon drone capability, then it's "only" five minutes. I suspect that nobody is going to have the capability to build their own version of Ghost Rider, much less Apollo, for quite a while.
And even with Apollo, you're looking at long flight times. Long enough that most warships will have a decent shot of activating their hyperdrives to get out of the way, if they're outside the hyperlimit.
First, thanks for that SftS reference; I'd missed it.
(I had the numbers from the two operational uses of Apollo w/FTL control; but had forgotten or overlooked that simulated use)
Second, you're correct, the system defense 4-drive Apollo birds are 3 normal drives plus a CM-derived 'sprint' drive. But that doesn't actually fix the relativistic problem.
Using non-relativistic math a Mk25's first 3 drives (at half power mode) push it up to 0.81c.
Then the sprint drive calculation shoves it to:
1.07c (130,000g for 60s - Mk30 CM spec),
1.13c (130,000g for 75s - Mk31 CM spec),
1.00c (95,000g for 60s - older CM spec), or
0.99c (90.500g for 60s - OBS CM spec).
None of those really make sense. So I assume RFC/BuNine will, to avoid ret-conning the performance of the Mk23s, just throw in a fudge factor (or maybe a speed limit) on any 4-drive missiles to keep them well below 1c.
But without knowing what that will be I couldn't really make reasonable guesses about it's powered range.