Jonathan_S wrote:I would guess that a capacitor powered missile it charged by electricity; but a micro-fusion powered missile (to save space and squeeze the tiny fusion plant in) isn't capable of cold-starting and has to get fed near critical plasma from another fusion reactor. (We know the pods for fusion powered missiles have their own onboard reactors, so those could "jump=start" the missiles. But in tubes you'd need (super high density) plasma feeds that the conventional missiles didn't. So you either have to pipe that from the ship's main fusion reactors, or put smaller "local" reactors near the tubes to jump=start the missiles.Kytheros wrote:Startup for micro-fusion plants is massively different from capacitor charging or starting of a regular missile, Also massively different from energy weapons, both beams and energy torpedoes.
Neither is a minor refit operation. (Plus of course the results if a fusion bird with it's reactor hot suffers damage in the tube is much worse than if it happens to a capacitor bird; that's why fusion tube designs have such extensive additional armor cofferdaming around their tubes. Even emergency refits probably wouldn't be willing to forgo that; lest a single hit chain reaction across all the tubes of a broadside)
Yeah, there are reasons RFC made refitting to fusion powered missiles is far from trivial.
The biggest factor is power. Capacitor missiles are charged in missile storage and take several hours or days to get the charge required for 3 minutes of operation. fusion powered missiles must get a massive power charge to start the reactor.
To illistrate, for a capacitor drive missile a 1 kw charger over 3 days will provide the power for 1,44 million watts over three minutes.
By comparision, the micro fusion reactor may provide 2,000,000 watts power but require 500,000 watts to power up.