Jonathan_S wrote:Or what happens if a LAC clips the LD with it's wedge (which is dozens of KMs wide) neither spider drive nor bubble sidewall should offer any protection from a wedge strike of even a small ship (though the bubble wall will protect from wedge strikes of missiles).
Strictly speaking, we don't know if the spider can actually disable a wedge. We do know that the only thing that can defend against a wedge is a stronger wedge. Since the spider is still a gravitic technology, it's possible at short ranges its immense power is equivalent of an oversized wedge. I don't think it's likely, though.
Either way, it's not a likely scenario. A LAC that is about to ram is a LAC that is disabled, probably because it lost its wedge in the first place. It's so damaged that it can't even fire its graser. And besides, it wouldn't be manoeuvring, so the LD can dodge it. It may be slow compared to wedge ships, but it can move its entire length (2 km?) at 150 gravities in 1.6 seconds.
But you raise an interesting tactical scenario: can a LAC (or a LAC wing, for that matter) use the barricade offensively against a wedgeless target? That is, intentionally "ram" with the knowledge that it will survive the collision unscathed? We don't exactly know how ships can change their acceleration vector using impellers: do they need to change their attitude so the wedge's vector changes? If that's the case, then a LAC going belly first against a target isn't accelerating towards the target. That's probably the case, since Harkness conceived the barricade against coasting missiles between wedge activations.
But the LAC can probably still accelerate on any direction perpendicular to its direction of motion (so long as the bowwall isn't on), so the LD can't evade. And it can't run from a LAC either, so the LAC only has to achieve sufficient relative velocity before it enters energy range. At that point, the collision is unavoidable.
The defence against this is to simply destroy the LACs before they impact. I wouldn't fire graser torpedoes against them; regular missiles will do fine. CMs even, for the last part of the flight. So long as that happens 1.5 seconds from collision, the LD has time to evade the debris. What is destroyed in that that gauntlet can also be vaporised into smaller bits with energy weapons.
Sure, this battle will be seen all across the system. But so long as the next cluster of enemy ships is sufficiently far, the LD can vanish again into stealth (if the stealth isn't compromised).
OTOH we're told a a ship cannot have a full bow and full stern wall active at once. You can have a full bow wall + a stern buckler (or the other way round) at the expense of being unable to use the wedge to accelerate or turn. Or you could have just a buckler up at each end and still have full use of the wedge.
You can have both, but if you do then you're not accelerating. So a LAC with all of them active further than 1.5 seconds away can be evaded. Either way, those aren't powerful enough to withstand full shipkiller missiles or dozens of CMs at short range.
Still, a LAC could accelerate towards an identified LD then pivot and duck behind its wedge as it approached energy range - then the LD would have to kill it with short range missile or torp fire, as the broadside energy mounts wouldn't have an angle around the wedge at the LAC. And the rest of the LACs in the squadron would presumably be helping beat back any missiles the LD launched. (And at close range missiles are too slow to be difficult targets; even given their high acceleration)
If they can pinpoint where the LD is, they would be firing their missiles from outside the LD's energy and CM range, not barricading into it.