Theemile wrote:Dauntless wrote:we have no idea about the manufacturing abilities of the OBS, it might have been given a very large stockpile to start with, or might have remote mining tugs it can send to asteroid belts.
beyond the fact that it sits in orbits and strikes whatever it is told or anything electrical, plus has some anti missile systems we know very little about what exactly it can do.
I do believe it was said its cells were refilled after the Armageddon Reef strike.
That suggests that:
1) it has a finitely limited # of shots at any one time (for some reason I'm remembering the # 6)
2) It has (or had) the infrastructure to refill itself. This could have been manual and disappeared with the Hamilicar.
What we don't know is how... adjustable the system can be. Armageddon Reef fubared a small continent - the St Khody strike seemed to be limited to a small village or a castle sized building. It could be Aramagedon Reef drained the whole OBS requiring a full reload, while St Khody was just 1 penetrator.
I believe that the Armageddon Reef OBS was a one-shot, at least in the sense that it was replaced after that with a more capable OBS. As for St. Khody, I don't think there is any textev of how many units were used to destroy the Abbey. I don't think, however, that the controllers would have relied on a single unit strike. I am sure that they would have launched several cells to ensure complete destruction of the Abbey and surrounds.
Personally, I still prefer the thought that they drop rocks rather than things like tungsten bars. Rocks are, for some strange reason, reasonably common in space, and would require only that they be able to fit into the launch cell with a guidance system attached. A 10 or 20 or even 100 ton rock will do major damage over a much wider area, although they will leave larger craters than tungsten rods as seen on Armageddon Reef. Also a falling rock would, I think, leave a much brighter trace than a tungsten rod, allowing the locals to be more aware of Gods anger.