Jonathan_S wrote:Actually it's extending the compensation field being distorted that slows ships down when towing pods. Without them I don't think the wedge cares how much mass it's moving - so towing pods shouldn't directly slow the fort down. On the other hand the grav plates can't affect the acceleration the towed pods experience - so if the fort makes a 100g emergency run any pod it's towing experiences 100 gees. I'm not sure a pod's tractor and components are rated to take anything near that since they normally experience 0-1g. To avoid damage to the pods a fort might be limited to, say, 5-10 gees of acceleration when towing pods -- but whatever the accel should be able to tow as many pods as can grab on without it affecting that accel.Theemile wrote:Compensators - that is the issue here. Forts do not have them due to their size, anything over ~12 Mtons would have negative move numbers if they used compensators. That is why Forts use Grav plates to negate mass - meaning all forts have a normal movement rate of ~50 gs and an emergency rate of 100-120 gs (with 5-6 Gs getting to the Crew.)
And it is the compensated field that negates mass inside the wedge. Meaning - every pod tractored to a fort should reduce it's ability to move. Not knowing current masses, a few dozen should quickly push the movement of a fort to zero - if that many.
Do pardon my bold.Theemile wrote:We know that when the pods are deployed outside the wedge, they slow down the ship.
We know when the pods are inside the compensated field, they do not slow down the ship.
We know if you carry too many pods, they extend outside the compensated field and slow down the ship - Is that disturbing the compensation field, or is it just being outside the field? The wedge area is Vast and mostly empty even for a destroyer, one would assume that someone had thought to build distanced tractor that held pods "out there" in the area outside the compensated field but still under the wedge - which would hold thousands of pods even for a destroyer.
Regardless of which it is, the net effect is obviously the same. But my intuitive guess would be because it is outside the compensation field, since being outside the field would equate to having "no compensation."
However, I was under the impression the LACs were towed outside the wedge.