cthia wrote:Granted. Though one scene, some bit o proof, is not the same as an absence of proof. I bet centuries on the thought being kosher.
You are proposing that the MAlign are innocent of having tech immune to active sensors until proven guilty. I think they're guilty as charged. That was a significant scene.
First, I have to apologize, there are actually two scenes. Mission of Honor Chapter 11 and Storm from the Shadows Chapter 51 both have MA ships coming close to RMN and Grayson ships respectively.
To quote from SFTS:
Their analysts' best estimate was that their stealth systems were equal to those of Manticore at a minimum, and probably at least marginally superior, although no one was prepared to assume anything of the sort.
I don't know about you, but I think I agree with the Alignment's shipbuilders here.
Mission of Honor, Chapter 11 only shows that the MA have refined the stealth features already used by everyone else to a higher degree. They have nothing that alters the basic rules of the stealth game (i.e. nothing to eliminate the need to radiate as much as possible away from enemy sensors).
What I'm trying to get at is that there are no indications in the books that MA ships are
significantly more stealthy than RMN ships would be in similar circumstances (meaning situations where they're going to full EMCON with their main drives and active sensors shut down). We know that they can evade detection at about 2 light minutes against a CA squadron that
isn't looking for them and evade detection against a DD division that is at over 7 light minutes, but we also know that the RMN routinely parks drones that noone can find within a few thousand kilometers of their targets (drones, I would add, that require an active wedge in order to work, i.e. something that the primary sensors of their targets are actively looking for all the time).
The main advantage spider drive vessels have is that they can accelerate faster under stealth than anyone else, but that does not exempt them from the basic realities of honorverse stealth. They cannot, for example, be parked near a heavily trafficed planet for any length of time before someone gets in the path of their stealth system's exhaust plume (especially if said system knows they're there and is actively looking for them with remote sensor platforms).