Jonathan_S wrote:Actually we have see wedge powered ships under stealth; but only at fairly long ranges and under quite low acceleration settings.
They're still nowhere near as stealthy as a Spider, even at the low accelerations a Spider's grav plates can support.
True, but this an area where the Alliance tech is ahead so it's not something the MAN can bank on. We've seen time and again that the RMN forces could see the ships trying to stay hidden during the liberation of the Madras sector and even during the war with Haven. And often it didn't seem the Ghost Riders were even especially close.
But your 3rd point (not quote) is probably the key one. The LD geometry is all wrong for a wedge, and if you fired one up that was mounted to it's triangular hull form it'd likely rip large parts of the ship's 3 spider keels apart.
There are reasons that wedge powered ships have a tapered cylinder hull form -- and its because that's the maximum volume shape that can be fit within given sized wedge - stick something out past that and the grav stresses during wedge start-up will shred it. (But warships can flare their hammerheads back out because they're beyond the impeller rings). You'd need an LD's impellers mounted on a standoff ring that was at least as far from the hull as the tip of the spider emitters atop the keels.
Indeed I was thinking that a Spider-driven ship, be it a Ghost, a Shark, or an LD, will have a massive, round-shaped ring in its hammerheads. The triangular main part of the body would be inscribed in that ring, never exceeding its projection. So this ship would have smaller internal volume than equivalent ship of this size drive by a wedge, were such a size to be feasible.
Normally that's be extra silly because that makes the ship look bigger to its compensator and thus reduces its accel - but an LD is already too large for a compensator to do anything and so it'd be under grav plates whether using Spider or Wedge.
(Which is another reason they likely wouldn't bother with a wedge - it doesn't give them any performance advantage over a spider in a ship that large. Its performance is limited by its grav plates; not its drive)
Oh, indeed! That's actually a nail in the coffin: the lack of compensators. The MAN grav plates can only compensate 150 gravities down to 1 and that's already less than the spider can pull at full power. There's no point in adding a wedge, since the ship
cannot accelerate any faster, if it wants the crew and loose equipment to remain undamaged.