It does seem like the the "new lightweight mass-drivers BuShips had perfected" have less recoil that they "should". I'm assuming those are actually using grav fields to fire the missiles... And at least while actively being towed by a ship the ship's tractor might handle recoil forces; since they seem to be able to apply lateral forces, not simply drag things directly behind the emitter. But system defense pods or normal pods used in a detached free-floating role don't seem to have issues kicking their missiles out far and fast enough to achieve separation necessary for drive startup.tlb wrote:quite possibly a cat wrote:I don't think there is any indication anything except for the wedges and spider drive is "reactionless" though. Even those are actually pushing on the hyperwall. True reactionless engines break the concept of energy.
Isn't the mass driver reactionless? The weight of the missiles in a pod exceed the pod's weight; but they are accelerated up to speed before they can get wedges up, not the pod. I thought the pulser used a variant of that.
But grav drivers (at least those small enough to be handheld) do still seem to have some recoil. In OBS there is a quote, when the Fearless's Marines are facing the wave of attacking Medusans, showing that pulse rifles have some recoil
On Bsailisk Station wrote:Kilgore's pulse rifle surged back, its recoil almost imperceptible through his armor as its small, powerful grav coil spat a stream of four-millimeter darts down-range.
In HOTQ Captain Yu, while using a counter-grav collar to work his way down a lift shaft needed to anchor himself against recoil before firing his pulser (pistol).
However HAE it implies that a pistol type pulser has significantly less recoil than a Colt .45, despite having ~ [edit: 7x] the muzzle velocity.
In Shadow of Freedom the much heavier anti-tank launcher used a stabilizing pressor beam to offset the launch recoil. I don't know if smaller weapons like rifles and pistols also cheat like that, or if their grav coils just inherently cheat Newton.