tlb wrote:We do not think a fort has a compensator. So is it the compensator that has most effect on the ship shape (along with wedge start-up effects)?
Why do we think that? They're still capable of moving under a wedge at ~50g, right? That's not particularly survivable for the crew. Also remember that forts have tonnage to spare, so including a compensator isn't that big of a deal. They also include both spherical and standard sidewalls for the same reason. For ships the tonnage difference makes the spherical sidewall impractical but forts have fewer size restrictions.
They could use the same grav plate compensation Honor used under reaction thrusters at Cerberus but that would have significant negative effects on crew efficiency while they were moving.
ThinksMarkedly wrote:But nothing tells us that the compensators are co-located with the rings. All we know is that they use the wedge's gravity sump to compensate. They could be an array distributed throughout the ship, so extending 100-150 m ahead of the ring might be no problem.
Evidence seems to suggest the compensator is a single unit mounted somewhat centrally similar to the hyper generator. There's never been an incident of a
partial compensator failure, where say the bow of a ship failed but the crew in the stern survived. It's always all-or-nothing and can result from relatively minor damage to the ship, such as Kusak's flagship in BoM.
Evidence also suggests it's impossible or at least highly impractical to have any sort of redundancy in the system. If having multiple units provided some sort of protection against the all-or-nothing failure of such a vital system, warships would do it. Even being split fore-and-aft would mean half the crew would survive and be able to continue fighting the ship with remote systems. This doesn't happen, so we have to assume it's a single unit covering the entire ship.