cthia wrote:Part of my reasons for suggesting some of the insane breakthroughs are based on a willingness of the MA to endanger their crew in the long run. And even risk dangerous incidents in the short run. Not unlike what the Russians historically, allegedly, did with their submarines. Namely the Kursk. And their nuclear power plants in general?
That's indeed quite possible. Taking insane risk with one's crews, especially if they don't know any better, is something I could see them doing. There's also the possibility that their people can be genetically engineered to be more resistant to acceleration effects or to radiation or whatever.
That's not my problem with the Alignment though. This is:
From the same thread, I am also aware of your thoughts about a missile with an insane flight profile compared to present GA technology. Surely your vehement objection can't be because the missile would require too much handwavium that would enable it to break the laws of physics. That ship, err missile, has already sailed.
I do have an objection to too much handwavium. That just removes the realism & believability in Sci-Fi. The more of it you have, the more it's fantasy, not Sci-Fi. The line is pretty thin as it is. An Analog article I read once said (paraphrased) that "a large, winged reptile that produces hydrogen in gastrointestinal processes and ignites it with a spark by snapping teeth together while exhaling" is Sci-Fi; "dragon" is fantasy. For us fans of David, another example is "a nanite infestation powered by electromagnetic radiation in the visible spectrum that keeps the subject healthy and allows practised users to command them to change their body shape, but which has a vulnerability to too much radiation input light sunlight" is Sci-Fi, but "vampire" is fantasy.
More specifically for the case of the MAlign, it's not that handwavium is impossible, it's that David is pretty good at not using too much of it. He's been very good at giving hints at technology coming before it does come, and we haven't seen any hint of these things. Part of the HV appeal is that it always builds on top of what's been said, without introducing sudden, unexpected technological revolutions. RFC is specifically aiming for this.
It's possible for the technology to be gradually introduced over the course of many books, but I don't think there are enough of them left for that to happen. I'd love to have another dozen HV-Honor-time books coming, but RFC seems to be winding that project down, not up. Maybe only after he's done with the storyline to where he wants it to be, then opens up for other authors.
And... we are back! To assuming the Spider has to decloak to use its weapons like the Klingon Bird of Prey?
No. That's why I said "do something it needs to" instead of "firing weapons." What that something is, is a matter for discussion.
Designing a ship that must break stealth in order to fire is a major failing. One only does that if there's a technological or physical limitation that cannot be overcome. The "Balance of Terror" original Star Trek episode that introduced the Romulans and the cloaking device had Spock speculating it was a power production issue: the BoP had a plasma cannon as its main weapon, so it could do one or the other, but not both. Like the Shrike and walls that we're discussing at the same time on this thread.
But a smart designer would have included some weapons that can be launched with no or minimal power requirements and would have designed the ship so it would have multiple angles to do that with so it had a chance to use those weapons even if they compromised stealth to an extent. I expect the MAN designers to have done exactly that: the LD should have torpedo launch tubes on all three of its broadsides, plus fore and after aspects, so it has five different launch angles for stealth weapons. THIS should be its mean tactic.
Firing grasers and breaking stealth shouldn't need to be.