cthia wrote:Wedge down
Does a ship have enough power for defensive systems if the wedge is down? In all cases? Even though we know a tremendous amount of energy is needed to start the wedge? God forbid if the start is unsuccessful. After all, this is an emergency visit.
I don't suppose it is too far-fetched that the electronics and hardware wasn't always as reliable as those systems are now. Especially in the Sol System.
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Yes, absolutely.
The wedge does provide a fair bit of its own power -- but unlike a Warshaski sail in a grav wave it does NOT produce surplus power that could be fed back into the ship's power systems.
Whether the wedge is up or down the ship can still have full power available to its defensive systems.
Sure, without the wedge it won't have sidewalls. But its radars, ECM, jammers, CMs, and PDLC is just as operable without the wedge as with it.
And even a SLN's SD's CMs and PDLC would swat away 24 LAC missiles (which, remember, have lower terminal velocity and less room for ECM and penetration aids than even a destroyer's missile)
And the SD's passive armor would negate most of the effects of a LAC missile's puny warhead anyway.
About the best you could do, if it didn't even bother to defend itself, would be to hit it with a full load of contact nukes. Those would likely be able to mission kill it by destroying its surface mounted sensors and probably knocking out a bunch of its weapons hatches and emitters. But the hull armor would keep the interior safe. (And even if you hit the far less armored dorsal or ventral surfaces an SD has a full wrap around armor cylinder around its core vitals; so the nukes still wouldn't kill those).
If you use laser heads some might breach the outer armor, or manage to hit an unarmored area, but they're not going to punch through the intervening compartments and then the inner armor to reach anything critical. And many of them may end up just cratering the meters thick armor that's specifically designed to defeat energy fire and nukes.
Basically the only way I can see for a single LAC to outright kill an SD is for the SD to belly up to it, just a thousand km or so away and then drop its wedge to expose its ventral surface. At that range the LAC might be able to pull of a wedge strike before the SD could obliterate it -- and the LAC's wedge would be enough to kill the SD. (Though the stress of doing so might well blow out the LAC's impeller rooms)