penny wrote:I still withhold my vote. A massive fort in orbit is much less metal than a massive fleet; which storyline says cannot be seen until their wedges come up. If aggressive scanning can detect a fort, it should be able to detect a massive fleet as well.
That is NOT correct, story-line is that
passive scans have trouble finding ships until their wedges come up. You forgot that Shannon Foraker set up an attack at Adler that killed a bunch of ships with their wedges down. From
In Enemy Hands:
Chapter 10 wrote:For all intents and purposes, surprise was total.
Commodore Yeargin's crews were still scrambling frantically to their stations when the first wave came in. Of her six heavy cruisers, two never got their point defense on-line at all. Three more managed—somehow—to bring their laser clusters up under computer control, but only Enchanter got off a single salvo of counter-missiles. Not that it made much difference. One hundred and six incoming missiles were picked off before they reached attack range; the other eight hundred and sixty-two raced in to twenty-thousand kilometers and detonated in rippling succession.
Nuclear explosions pocked space, each one generating a thicket of bomb-pumped X-ray lasers. It wasn't even a massacre, for there was nothing—absolutely nothing—between those lasers and their targets. It took less than four seconds for all eight hundred-plus warheads to attack. Sixteen seconds later, Shannon Foraker's second salvo streaked down on the stunned, mangled survivors, and when the last of them detonated, the Manticoran Alliance had lost six RMN heavy cruisers, three RMN and seven GSN light cruisers, and nine destroyers . . . without getting a single shot off at their attackers.
There are some other things that you have not included in your guess:
1) "Tourville's officers had known their drives and defensive systems would be needed, and they'd been at standby for over fifteen hours, but even with hot impeller nodes,
they would need at least another thirteen minutes to bring their wedges up." A fort would take longer to bring up its defensive wall.
2) If a prankster takes your soccer ball and a bunch of your golf balls and throws them in the rough, you are going to have a much easier time recovering the soccer ball than getting ALL of the golf balls.
The sheer size of the fort makes it harder to hide and it is a much more expensive piece of equipment that most of the ships of the fleet. Therefore you cannot afford to have the sidewalls down on all of your forts, because a stealthed enemy could find and destroy them before their defensive walls could come up.