ThinksMarkedly wrote:kzt wrote:No, David has said the failure is instantaneous. It goes from ‘hey everything is great’ to red goo without warning.
But the ship can survive the compensator failure without damage (because reasons) so it’s easy enough to test.
When the compensator fails, yes. It goes from compensating 560 gravities to compensating zero.
My point is that when it's not failed, it is compensating 560. So you can go to 560.1 and detect the 5.7° deviation in gravity.
So why don't they go above 100%? That's a good question. We do know that gravity plates do work on a non-tower ship, despite being in the wrong vector (see Honor's stunt at Cerberus). I'd assume that the gravity plates don't work in conjunction with compensators, so you can choose 50-gravity compensation with plates or 560 with compensators, but not 560+50. A 1% increase in acceleration takes us to only 565.6, which is not going to catch smaller ships. But it is going to increase the perceived gravity inside the ship to 5.1 gravities and shifted 78° towards the aft.
That’s not how it works. In “Ms. Midshipwoman Harrington”, Honor takes the ship above 100% with no change in felt forces.