WeirdlyWired wrote:it is like the bug hitting the windshield. With inertial compensator 7oo kps accel has the real feel of 1G. Failure is to be standing still and being slammed by the aft bulkhead at 600kps. 9g is pretty fatal, this would be over 600g.
Yes I did poorly in High School Physics in 1967.
robert132 wrote:I've always had issues with the notion in SciFi that space or star ships would have not only preposterously high acceleration rates that SHOULD tear that engine or other propulsion unit right off or send it through the ship AND that ship having a variation of Star Trek's "inertial dampers" or the Honorverse "compensator" to protect the crew from the G forces that incredible acceleration would produce.
Okay, granted ... the fields these devices produce protect the crew and the structure of the ship. I have trouble though with the idea that FAILURE of the "compensator" wouldn't send the drive nodes tearing forward through the rest of the ship, at least until they stop generating the propulsive "wedge" when they tear loose from their power conduits or cabling.
In short, I agree with those who postulate that "compensator failure" would be catastrophic not only for the crew but also for ANYTHING not securely part of the ship's main structure AND for a great deal of that which IS like transverse bulkheads or a lot of the internal equipment like ship's supplies in the storerooms, shuttles in the bays, fuel or liquids in tanks and so on. Catastrophic for the entire ship in other words.
Theemile wrote:Actually, just think of the damage a fork could do to a electronic control panel when accelerated for a second or 2 at 500 gs. Now multiply that by 1,000,000 unsecured or lightly secured objects around the ship. It doesn't matter if the structure is damaged or nodes rip off ( which probably might happen ) the interior of any ship would need completely replaced, not just hosed out.
In the scenario where the nodes are exerting all the force, and the compensators are then distributing the force, when the compensators fail, that force is going to be focused on eight (or 16) discrete points on the ship's hull.
Given the magnitude of the force involved, those nodes are going to rip off pretty dang quick, so the force that's transmitted to the rest of the ship through the hull is going to be similar to a kinetic strike. Some of that force is going to be expended in ripping big holes in the hull, some more is going to go into crumpling parts of the hull. One thing that is not going to happen is for the hull to act as a completely rigid body for the force to act the same way on everything in the ship.