George J. Smith wrote:Just rereading TSVW and the description of the battle where Helen Zilwicki's squadron defends the convoy.
Warshawski sails are used by ships in hyper to provide propulsion, as they would be destroyed if they bring up their wedges.
OK, what if S&S could give missiles Warshawski sails?
In order to get beyond wedge interference range before lighting off the impeller a missile is launched using some form of railgun technology so if the missile was designed to go directly to Warshawski sails instead of the normal wedge could that work? And if it could it would be a game changer.
(or is that something to be added to the ship that must not be named along with its weapon that must not be named)
Pearls of Weber: Warshaski sail missiles
And you need a pair of sails for a ship, or drone, or whatever to maneuver and accelerate in a grav wave - not the single ring of impellers capable of powering a missile. So I seem to recall from a prior discussion that the smallest you could make a sail propelled object is roughly 1/2 - 1/4 the size of a dispatch boat. So you're talking about a 10,000 - 20,000 ton 'missile'. And because it's using scaled down ship propulsion it would have less than 3x the acceleration of a ship. So a big, relative slow, target for the ship's energy mounts.
Yes it might do a little damage, and you don't risk your own ship getting damaged in return, but it's a wildly inefficient way of doing so...
Combat in grav waves is already so astonishingly rare that navies don't bother to install bubble sidewall generators on their ships - even though that should be far less of a cost and volume hit than these sail attack drones (I can't really call something that big and slow a missile) and give the ships carrying them a major advantage if able/forced to fight in a grav wave. The massive advantage in that one scenario isn't worth the cost and opportunity costs for that volume in the combat and operations they're overwhelmingly more likely to engage in throughout their carriers.
It would be an interesting technical trick to build a sail powered drone/missile - but not, at this time, a militarily practical one. Sorry.