cthia wrote:Apollo's design is perplexing to me. Apollo can read the sensors on its clutch of missiles and get this info to the other control missiles that is trailing it. But it doesn't handle that directly. It does this by sending it round trip - back upstream to the KH (the signal inefficiently passing above the heads of the trailing control missiles) then it propogates back downstream to the control missiles (One which already knows - 'cause it was the leading one that sent it) then finally to the brood.
At this point, because the ship is too far out of position to make any calculations, it isn't needed. The control missiles are now making the calculations. The KH platform therefore, is no longer needed because the ship's info is outdated and the KH is only a final-leg relay at this point. Yet, why is the KH platform at this stage needed? It seems the lead "recon" clutch of missiles should be able to directly talk to the other control missiles now. They all have the same FTL send/receive capability. Disconnect the KH channel and the bandwidth/channel immediately becomes available to each control missile. What's the KH needed for at this point, it doesn't perform any calculations, I'm told?
Hmm.
First the total round-trip FTL transmission lag from a ACM to the controlling Keyhole II and back to a ACM in the next salvo is only about 0.16 of a second; being 62 times faster than light is amazing. It appears from the few engagements we've seen that a keyhole II can only reach about 5 lightseconds - beyond that you need relays of some sort to talk to the missile.
So adding the ability to to peer-to-peer FTL doesn't save much time.
Second, the only part of ship's position that matters for calculations is whether or not it's still within range to talk to the ACM
(Well, I guess theoretically a large wedge interposed near the missile or the keyhole II might mask the FTL signals...). The ship doesn't need the same line of sight to the target as the missiles have - because the Apollo control missile is sending all the consolidated sensor information to the ship for the massive tactical computers to crunch through. The ship gets their senor info < 0.08 of a second after they send it, sets its tactical computers to determine if there's any new info the missiles need to know from that, and tightbeams updates to any relivant ACMs (again reaching them in less that 0.08 of a second)
Third I tend to imagine that the sensors for the FTL tranceiver are bolted onto the back of the missile, where they've got a view back to the launch platform. So they'd be pointing entirely the wrong way to pulse grav ripples sideways or forewards.
The normal attack sensors on the missiles nose,
might, be able to be used to receive FTL transmissions from ahead of it, but the grav pulse transmitter is fairly directional and you'd have to add extra (bulky) transmitters to broadcast in other directions.
So I don't see where it's a big limitation that the ACM has to talk to the ship. It adds very little lag disseminating the information to other ACMs and the ship has both more comprehensive information and more capable computers to evaluate that information.
More comprehensive because it's getting the sensor data from every missile it launched, and all its recon drones, plus whatever its onboard sensors can add.