svenhauke wrote:lets not argue
in my opinion
at that angels
the top and buttom are not better protected then the sides
basicly protected from the front, but not from side shots
so sorry don t leave top and bottom unprotected
Vulnerable to a rare and unlucky shot.
I went back and did some number-crunching (using the Gryphon-class SD as my base). I assume that the flat portion on top is 1/3rd the total width (so 66 1/3m wide) and that the armored side reaches all the way up to that point (so 92.5m above the centerline).
I calculated the penetration of a laser head beam that came in from a 0 deflection broadside shot, descending at the perfect angle from the outer lip of the wedge to just the point where the armor reach the top of the hull.
For what it's worth I used the highest point on the wedge along the hull (forward hammerhead face); but since the wedge height only varies by 342.75m over the length of the hull there shouldn't be a huge variation; but I gave the laserhead the advantage of more height to work with.
So it just impacts at (33.16667, 92.5)m. By the time it reaches the centerline it's continued down to (0, 79.76585)m, and it hits the backside of the far broadside's armor at roughly (-42, 63)m. So in all it penetrated to a depth of about 29m. Or to put it another way, 15% of the draught of the hull.
But if that shot was centimeters lower it would impact the upper edge of the armor, and do far less damage; centimeters higher and it'd impact the wedge, doing no damage. It basically has to make the perfect decending 21 degree angle past those points to score.
And this disregards the deflecting effects of the sidewall, or the tendency RFC [url=forums.davidweber.net/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=1533&p=30136]once mentioned[/url] of the sidewall to 'bend'
That bending of the wedge would also reduce the vulnerable zone.runsforcelery wrote:or slightly deforms the surface of the impeller wedge, pulling it "downward" to the edge of the sidewall plate, which is where the defensive "shadow" originates"
So the tops and bottoms are not invulnerable. Lucky shots can hit them. (And lucky down-the-throat shots have even better chances of doing so).
But they're unlikely to be hit, and hits there aren't going to penetrate into the ship's vitals. So if you have to economize on armor somewhere, it makes sense to so so there. (Plus things like the boat bays, on the ventral side, effectively can't be armored -- they have to trust to luck and dispersion to keep some operational after a fight)