ThinksMarkedly wrote:Jonathan_S wrote:So compensator improvement has been an ongoing process; and I wouldn't be surprised if it continued into the future.
How far will it go? The Rolands and Wolfhounds had a design accel of 780 gravities and this is current as of HoS, 1919 PD. If the Invictus are getting 10% improvement, that would take the DD to about 860. Will we see 1000 gravities?
And will missiles get an accel boost too? They're not as limited by compensation.
A Roland or Wolfhound is pretty close to the top end of what I've noticed
(I really need to go through the last few books again and try to pick out any hard acceleration numbers - problem is to be confident of knowing how much a ship has improved I need both its accel & its power level for that accel; and that combination is rarely listed together in the books)Still, based on what their masses should have allowed with pre-Grayson tech I rate either's entry in HoS as 151.51% quicker than they'd have been with a 1900 PD compensator.
The fastest I have on my spreadsheet was the Invictus from SftS at 154.76% (compared to their design compensator at 141.97%)
Then with what is presumably a generation older compensator design we've got several classes Saganami-B-class – CA, Avalon-class – CL, Agamemnon-class – BC(P), Saganami-C-class – CA, Nike-class – BC(L), and Kamerling-class – System Control Cruiser all clocking in, per HoS design specs, tightly clustered around 145%.
(The Sag-B being the oddball as it was commissioned 2 years earlier, but seems to share that compensator generation)The Invictus and Harrington II-class SD(P)s were commissioned around the same time as most of those classes, but were originally designed with one further generation back in compensator tech. This presumably reflects the lengthier design and construction times for an SD(P) compared to the lighter units.
Who can say if the trend will continue or if they'll hit a new plateau. But based on the jumps we've been seeing getting a Roland or Wolfhound to hit 1000g flat out would be about another 7-9 generations of consistent improvement. And we've only had about 8 generations so far from generation 1 back in 1904. But assuming a roughly steady progression, no massive roadblocks or unexpected leaps forward, it'd probably be around 1940 PD before something the size of a Roland cracked 1,000 gees.
OTOH the missiles have, if anything, been regressing in acceleration. For a while during the first war the accel, and hence range, had been creeping upwards. I think the quickest we saw was during the White Haven's attack in Barnett shortly before the ceasefire. Those (presumably Mk41) MDMs were capable of 96,000/48,000g. But some the 2nd war and the fusion powered Mk23 & Mk16 MDM/DDMs and we're back down to the early war 92,000/46,000g.
I don't know if RFC had an in-universe reason for that written into his tech bible before he wrote War of Honor or if he'd just forgot how quick he'd had the pre-ceasefire missiles get. But the only missiles we've seen getting quicker since the ceasefire are the CMs. So who knows if the offensive missiles will get some of that acceleration boost - or if the DDMs will pick up the longer drive endurance of the ERM/LERM missiles which would give them a substantial range boost.