ThinksMarkedly wrote:penny wrote:I have never seen it stated anywhere. I just assumed they are visible. Star Trek baggage I suppose. But if it is a beam, why wouldn't it be visible?
Because beams aren't visible in the first place, unless you're in its path or they collide with something along said path and disperses some of you to your sensors/eyes. It was a major disappointment when I first used a laser pen and it did not shine like a phaser or a light sabre!
Right. Good example. Security systems that feature lasers are a good example as well. Smoke or some sort of gas makes them visible. But then tractors are interacting with the towed object, and at that point they should be seen. If you aim a laser pointer at the neighbor's house, you can see the beam on it. Or in a classroom, you can see it on the board. Anyway, when Byng fired on the destroyers because the space station,
Giselle, had mysteriously blown up, IINM there was talk about "not seeing" an energy weapon, and they knew there had been no missiles fired. I suppose an energy weapon is different, in that respect, it certainly isn't gravitic.
Thinksmarkedly wrote:And in this case, they are a gravitic phenomenon. We don't know how the gravitic sensors work to say if scattering can happen.
I considered that they could be a gravitic phenomena, but dismissed it because I didn't think gravity would be directional as such. I know the LDs have a special relationship with gravity, but... gravitic tractors? If gravity can be coaxed so effortlessly, there should not be any openings in the wedge. But then there are portholes created on a whim (in the sidewalls?) for firing weapons, etc., golly gee.
penny wrote:A warship isn't tractoring anything in the middle of a battle. Except when the RMN tractored so many pods. But they were inside the wedge, which I also assumed that being inside the wedge would hide the fact that pods are being towed. But IINM, there were times pods were tractored outside the wedge, but still were not visible. As the only way the enemy could tell you were probably towing pods was by the low acceleration. But in my head there has always been the question about the tractors.
Thinksmarkedly wrote:Right. Early in the first war with Haven, the pods were tractored outside of the wedge (and thus the compensator field), which reduced the acceleration of the towing ship. So no one was trying to detect the pods, because everyone would know. Oh, this might be usable as a bluff, but even if you can't see the tractors, you may be able to see the pods themselves.
Later in the series, GR drones did exactly that, IINM. They spotted pods???
Thinksmarkedly wrote:In any case, maybe the tractors couldn't be seen from the distance... especially not against the bright wedges of the ships that were doing the towing. It might be like trying to see the candle or torchlight being held in front of the million candlepower spotlight.
That's the only thing I could come up with as well. They get lost in the brighter glare of wedges. But a long gangly line of them I'd think could be seen from certain angles. And then there is Foraker's
Donkey which operated some distance away from the ship and it also featured towed pods with power "beamed" from the ship.
At any rate, the way laser pointers work is the best explanation I suppose.
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The artist formerly known as cthia.
Now I can talk in the third person.