Jonathan_S wrote:There are plenty of pictures of the right side of Air Force One, and the most casual online search finds them. The president is never seen entering or leaving from the right side; and so the video and close-ups of him never show the right side. But then I've never seen a commercial airliner board or disembark from the right side either.
Pretty sure that's just a carry-over from ships, since the left side is, after all, the
port side, which is the side in which the port was when ships docked. I'm also sure there are videos on YouTube answering the question why you always board aeroplanes from the left.
It's just standard convention to board from the left. (I've seen claims it's because the pilot sits in the left seat and so can best judge how to position the plane relative to the jet bridge, air stairs, or welcoming party when those are on his left. Then as a consequence plane is laid out so most ground crew access is from the right, including often putting galleys opposite the main passenger entry door so that opposite side door can be used to restock the galley off the scissors lift truck while passengers are getting on or off)
That's not a reason today, since there's a 50-50 chance that the pilot in control is the first officer and thus sitting on the right (starboard) seat. They also don't look to their left to see the jetway; instead, they look forward to the ground worker with the lollipops indicating whether to turn left, right, continue forward or stop.
All the rest is consequence. Because we've always boarded from the left, the galleys are organised so that access to the left side isn't required while resupplying the plane.
Though I've wondered if we board on the left because the flag drawn on the fuselage is drawn correctly (mast to the left). On the right side of the aeroplane, the flags are usually drawn backwards, as if they were blowing because of the wind and held up by a mast to the right (front).
As to Cachat if he'd been a trained ship specialist and been able to see the hull of HMS Invictus as he approached the most obvious thing he'd have seen (which the RMN would have been trying to keep under wraps) would be the enormous docked Keyhole platform amidships. He might not know all its capabilities; but it'd be clear that it had PDLCs, sensors, and impeller nodes -- that it was a detachable platform nearly the size of a destroyer. And self-evidentlythe RMN thought it was worth devoting quite a lot of prime broadside real estate to squeeze it in. (And therefore clearly rated it as more useful than all the hull mounted sensors, CMs, PDLCs, and/or missiles that could have been installed in its place)
Weren't the Invictus built from scratch with Keyhole platforms? Or more precisely, weren't HMS Intolerant and HMS Imperator seen in action in Havenite systems with their Keyholes deployed prior to this point?
I'm not talking about Keyhole IIs. I don't remember now if the ships under Adm. Yanakov that first fired the Apollos during Operation Sanskrit had to have a refit prior to doing so, but I don't think so. I think all the Invictus and Honor Harrington II class ships were built from the ground up with Keyhole II. Only the Andermani ships had to go through a refit.
And HMS Nike was also part of Eighth Fleet so the RHN would have seen Keyholes deployed by battlecruisers too.
He also might have been able to get a rough count of its point defense, and see that it mounted no broadside offensive tubes. In as of itself that may not be hugely useful; but once Haven can start correlating combat recordings against that information it lets them better figure out how capable each RMN mount is.
That wouldn't have been news to the RHN. By this time, the two Invictus under Honor's command had seen action and the RHN had pretty good scans of them, even if at long range and through sidewalls. This is also after the Battle of Solon, where HMS Intolerant was lost, so the RHN had also recovered debris from that ship.
Plus, it's possible they got enough scans from the Invictus in construction at Grendelsbane before those ships were scuttled. Unlike battle conditions, none of those ships had wedges and sidewalls up to obscure their features.
And it's possible that he'd have been able to judge the relative size of the CM tubes and realize that Manticore had switched to larger CM (aka the Mk31). If his path had led him past the hammerhead tubes he might also have been able to judge the relative size of the Mk23 tubes and thus have an estimate of how much smaller the RMN MDMs were than Haven's counterparts -- allowing Havenite naval intelligence to better estimate the number a podlayer could carry; which would feed into tactical plans.
Again old news. All those missiles had been used in quite a lot of battles since the war had resumed.
And of course with unrestricted views he might have an idea of the number and type of ship's Honor had available, and might have seen new types, like the Nike-class BC(L). We don't know how much public info there was about the ships designed during the ceasefire; so even a small glimpse might let Haven figure out quite a lot (if for no other reason than by rejecting rumors or scraps of intelligence that conflicts with his observations)
Or even seeing what the RMN doesn't have with Honor at Trevor's Star could give them useful intelligence.
The force composition would have been useful information, indeed. This sits between Cutworm III (Battle of Solon) and Sanskrit (Battle of Lovat) and Eighth Fleet had taken a beating at Solon. So knowing how the Alliance had reinforced Eighth Fleet would have been priceless knowledge. Even knowing that there were still very few (if any) Andermani ships would have been important.
But Cachat couldn't know that by eyeballing. Ships aren't close enough that you can tell what they are by looking out a viewport and warships don't have running lights. They're dark specs against the blackness of space. Even if he could see something by the reflection of sunlight (and remember this is next to the Junction Terminus, so far from the star), he'd see a dot or a small dash. Just think of the last time you were on an aeroplane and looked down to a cloudless terrain: could you spot any cars? And this is from 10-12 km away, not the hundreds to thousands that would separate ships in their parking formations in Trevor's Star.
Plus, without further reference to compare, couldn't judge distances either. So he wouldn't be able to tell a frigate from a superdreadnought (and there was a frigate in system, the Nat Turner).