cthia wrote:Are you sure about that? You seem to be attributing superhuman abilities to humans and technology. You are telling me that a fleet or ship that is completely oblivious to an attack in a total time of peace, a fleet that is sharing birthday cake of one of the officers, can suddenly shake off their shock, launch LACs and the LACs can get into position, and the XO can give orders to the helmsman (because the Captain is in her quarters) and the helmsman can react and the ship can respond all in three minutes? The human brain needs time to process the impossible, the improbable and the unlikely. See Chin in At All Costs. Assuming!...the wedges are magically even up anticipating a sucker punch! On top of that, are you absolutely certain software can cope with these, insane, acceleration rates???
Yes. That's why they drill, so they can go from Condition 4 to Action Stations in the least amount of time. How low that number is, I can't tell (I don't think it was said in the text at all). 60 seconds may be too little, but 3 minutes sounds plenty. It is, after all, the time it took single-stage missiles to burn out their impellers.
More importantly, a ship not in friendly territory would maintain some level of readiness, from which it can get to full battle stations in less time.
At least not onscreen, so thanks for adding the qualifier, "as far as we know." Cataphracts would not represent the state of the art MAlign design. No Navy wants to serve any wine before it's time.
I understand. My argument is that they knew the SLN was losing the war. They rushed Cataphracts A, B and C and did anything they could to make the SLN survive. If they had more hidden up their sleeves that wasn't a Top Secret state secret (like the spider or streak drives), they would have. If they had 10x improved impellers, they might have given the SLN / TIY a 1.5x improvement.
RFC is fond of saying that you have to think through the implications of technology. If you have it, how does it transform your warfighting techniques?
Uh huh, after they can bring the wedge up. As I understand it a three minutes sucker punch ain't gonna given sitting ducks enough time. Byng would be proud.
Any ship not at a dock or in orbit of a planet, or instead repairing the impellers, should keep its wedges up. There's no reason to shut it down, even in the Manticore system. Especially lone ships -- and capital ships are never alone. A squadron should also not keep all its wedge aspects oriented in the same way, which makes stealth ambushes quite difficult. The GA knows the MAlign is out there and has good stealth. Rule #1 of Space Warfare: don't make it easy for the enemy to kill you.
You've pointed out before that over a decade, the SOPs may relax. I agree. But we know there won't be a decade jump in the books, so the pressure will continue up. I don't see the GA relaxing procedures any time soon.
ThinksMarkedly wrote:You have to posit a plausible scenario by which the technology breakthrough happened. RFC has been very careful in extending the technology in such a way it is believable and builds upon previous hints. The spider drive and the MDM are so far the only that aren't Black Swans (i.e., you can't simply say it's a logical extension of where the state of the art was). The streak drive was explained as pure brute force and we know hyperspace bands had been cracked 7 times before in the past.
Note: I meant the spider and MDM are Black Swans.
cthia wrote:True, I can't say it is a logical extension of RMN tech. I can say it would be a consistent habit of the MA to think outside the box. And, having their location classified, not operating on a time schedule while fighting for its life, able to work on tech sporadically for centuries allows them to accomplish what the average Navy doesn't have time to do. Even if that other Navy hasbthe motivation or insight. We're talking Alphas, baby.
On the other hand, not having to fight for its life never produced the type of encouragement that Samuel Johnson talked about ("when a man knows he is to be hanged in a fortnight, it concentrates his mind wonderfully."). We know, for better or for worse, that conflict and war are moments in history that spur innovation. And we know RFC believes that because it's the underpinning of the entire Honorverse and he explicitly wrote so in The Valkyrie Protocol.
The MAlign was never under existential threat, but the MA and later the RoH were. They are now, though.
And I've said before and will say it again: RFC must be holding something about MAlign tech that he hasn't told us about. The little we know about the Lenny Dets makes no sense as a warship. It's too slow and too vulnerable, depending exclusively on stealth. So I do think they must have some technological breakthrough we haven't heard about yet, which makes this ship useful in combat. Maybe it is a 2-million-gravity missile, but I don't think so. A 5-million-km graser is more likely and grasers are an area we've been told they've researched.
For purely stealth surprise attacks, I'd go smaller, not bigger. A Shark can do the job as well as an LD, but having a smaller profile it's less susceptible to detection. And if destroyed, the loss in investment is smaller.
Agreed, but those limitations were reached long ago. See my sentiments of missiles operating in a veritable minefield of debris on the aptly named thread. But somehow matter has never seemed to...matter.
It hasn't happened often that the ships being attacked stay with their debris. Almost every single engagement involves ships accelerating somewhere, which means the debris is always left behind (or ahead, as the case may be). Shaping a course around a cloud of debris that you know is there is trivial.
The one exception I can think of is the Battle of Hypatia, where SLN TF 1030 stayed put close to the planet, and this only because they were caught with their pants down and didn't have time to accelerate away from the planet anyway. But in this battle, RMN TG 110.2 was firing 4-minute ERMs at 46000 gravities, which only gave them 110 Mm/s more than the launching ships' base velocity. TG 110.2 had accelerated for the attack, though, but that means the missiles' terminal velocity must have been around 0.4c to 0.45c.