kzt wrote:Securing 20 million tons of steel girders against 5cm/sec^2 maneuvering of a docking thruster is not at all like securing 20 million tons of steel girders against the 500m/sec^2 of 50 gravities of a wedge.
Jonathan_S wrote:Kytheros wrote:50 gravities is soakable by standard grav plating, I'm pretty sure.
Even without that, as long as the inertial compensator is functional, any wedge-based acceleration is meaningless, and the effects of maneuvering thrusters can be handled by the grav plating. And if your compensator isn't functioning properly, you're going to keep to the accel your plating can handle while on your way to the nearest place to repair or replace your compensator.
That being said, you'd still need to do some degree of securing the cargo, as you want it to be organized on loading and remain organized while off-loading, and accidents can happen. Much of that would probably be handled through some degree of automation, though.
It appears from some of the combat scenes that even a fully functional compensator doesn't 0 out all external accelerations; unexpected ones from missile impacts can still ring the hull like a bell. I assume thats one reason the bridge stations feature shock frames for chairs.
For probably slightly different reasons I suspect that grav plates don't automatically cancel out accelerations; their strength has to be computer adjusted to cancel out accelerations. That's easy to fairly quickly do if you're accelerating in a constant direction. But I suspect it's impractical to use them to make docking maneuvers internally imperceptible. A thruster than fires just a tad late; or runs a touch ragged would create a brief mismatch as the computer anticipated acceleration didn't quite match the actual. Far better to strap down, or otherwise secure, the cargo so that you don't need to worry about a little (or fairly big) bump starting an avalanche.
I don't think the compensator affects any external forces of acceleration at all, just the wedge acceleration.
While I think grav plating would have issues with damping unexpected external accelerations, I suspect that the "thrusters" would be employing grav-driver tech and accelerating the reaction mass out, rather than relying on a fuel reaction, and as such the kinds of issues with non-standard accelerations would be functionally mitigated. Also, not knowing how the grav plates actually dampen acceleration forces felt ... it may be that within their limitations, they can soak however much they're set to soak or any amount less, and not need continuous adjustment - which would certainly make everything a lot simpler. We don't actually know how much force was imparted and negated in the instances you refer to, but missiles are respectably sized objects moving pretty fast, so I'd expect that they're hitting pretty hard, but how much of what was transferred actually was felt and how much (if any) was negated by grav plating is unknown.
That said, I fully agree that there would be some means of securing the cargo ... just that that means wouldn't need to be capable of taking the full undampened acceleration forces. Besides, I expect maneuvering thrusters on transports are probably run at very low accelerations, even for reaction thrusters - and very likely supplemented with or fully replaced by tractor beams for final approach.
Remember, even milspec structural stuff (admittedly a Masadan LAC) can fail under high accelerations, and I'd expect the requirements for that to be a lot more stringent. In Honor of the Queen, a pressure tank on one of the LACs that was being towed to Yeltsin from Masada broke free from its mounting and tore a hole through the ship. Sure, it was a Masadan LAC, but still, I'd expect the requirements for civilian cargo handling and securement to be much less stringent.
DDHvi wrote:Brigade XO wrote:
snip
In the end, some kind of physical restraint is probably involved.
Necessary unless some form of reliable non-physical restraint is used. Even then, remember the circuit breaker problem mentioned earlier. Wasn't there a scene, IIRC in OBS where they needed to move missiles manually from a non-functional ammo queue to a functional one, and someone got mostly crushed when a hit jolted the ship
Dauntless wrote:yep as you say it was on bassilisk station, moving missiles from magazine to another. Bosun Mcbride was badly hurt and harkness just missed being hurt as well
True, however, I believe it was also mentioned that the automated transfer tubes between the port and starboard magazines were inoperable, thus, they had to do it manually.
Also mentioned in that scene was something called a "grav-collar", which would probably also be something applicable to manipulating cargo. That didn't negate inertia though.