Jonathan_S wrote:Somtaaw wrote:Regarding the compensator thing, because all warships are the slightly flattened spindles with hammerheads... couldn't they up that volume slightly without really changing the field by just 'fattening' up the ship?
Remove that tapering, or if that's absolutely necessary mechanic for the wedge itself, then if you fattened it up a bit, and then just have an almost vertical 'drop' to have the required thin section for your nodes, then do the standard hammerhead flare? Wouldn't that mildly increase warship displaced tonnage, without significantly decreasing compensator function?
The problem is that a full ship's wedge reportedly creates a heck of a grav shear when it comes online. The taper from the nodes towards the middle of the ship is needed (as I understand from things RFC has dropped over the years) to keep the hill from intruding into the turbulent grav start-up zone where the wedge initialization would shred the hull.
I assume the hull taper is already pretty close to maxing out the safe zone; fatten it much and you risk tearing up the hull there whenever you start the wedge...
Perusing the ship profiles, the taper gets much sharper with (1) larger units, and (2) later units. This suggests that the required taper doesn't scale directly with increased volume (maybe it varies with cross-section?) and that they've been able to tighten up the tolerances with time and development.
The amount you can get back with a tighter taper isn't all that pronounced though. The naval architects will all worship at the altar of efficiency with the devotion of fanatics, but there's not that much we can expect them to get in terms of tonnage there. They may get (by comparison with volume) a wee bit more in broadside area and they're sure to use that, but I'm also sure they can find some use for the taper surface area too - and maybe more such use the more the tapered area faces outward instead of at the inside of the hammerhead. If that's the case, then there's cause
not to minimize the taper every bit as much as can be.
Speaking of usable surfaces though: LAC bay hatches on CLAC's. Should we assume they're covered with fire control links, sensors, etc.? I don't recall any mention, and I suppose there may be some sense by some designer that they're just there to be armored hatches, but broadside surface area going to waste is offensive and I'd think avoidable in this case.