Toll of Honor
Captain Cristina Zaragoza, HMS Cestus’ CO, winced visibly, and Brandy didn’t blame her. Nor did she like to think about what a four-band crash translation would do to Prince Adrian’s hyper generator. It wouldn’t present any safety threats to a well-found ship whose generator was in good repair, which Prince Adrian’s was. It would, however, burn somewhere around two T-months of the generator’s normal overhaul cycle in less than fifteen minutes.
This is also something that is quite interesting, but it is also something
else that surpried me. This particular crash translation subtracted a full
two T-months off the generator's
life cycle? I knew that crash translations resulted in wear and tear, but that amount seems to be far too excessive for a much smaller navy to sustain; a smaller navy who has a much smaller order of battle overall. Intuitively, a far bigger navy can wage a different kind of war of attrition by forcing the enemy's need for repairs to exceed the life of their components,
and their ability to keep up with repairs. I realize that that happens anyway as a byproduct of battle, but I am suggesting that the tactic can be used intentionally. Not only are ones enemy's people worn down by the tactic of constantly hypering in and out, but an enemy's ships can be worn down by forcing them to maintain hot nodes.
At any rate, it would appear that crash translations are imperative if a fleet is to be successful attacking the enemy's rear areas. But eating away at that much of your component's life cycle during every attack on an enemy's rear areas seems very costly. (OTOH, it might explain why the humongous League had so many maintenance issues because of their larger bailiwick). And if the enemy has hot nodes, a smaller navy probably cannot sustain the resulting attrition rate. And if the crash translation is off and there is some middle ground in the enemy's ready status, it could all be a waste of component wear.
What does Jayne's say about the MTBF of the hyper generator and the compensator?
Choosing the correct operational tempo seems to be far more critical than I once thought. Honor and
Eighth Fleet readily comes to mind.
That didn’t even consider what that sort of sustained plunge through hyper space would do to the crews’ stomachs. They’d hit each band’s boundary at a maximum gradient, and a lot of people would be puking their guts out by the time they finished. From Captain Zaragoza’s expression, she expected to be one of them.
I am assuming that maximum gradient refers to the shortest distance between two bands—the infamous smallest distance between two points. Something our very own space shuttle wouldn't want to try at home during reentry.
Brandy’s stomach was less sensitive than many, but she still made a mental note to go easy on the pre-battle solid meal the Navy traditionally fed its people.
“Once we’ve made translation into n-space,” Chen continued, “a lot will depend on how good our astrogation was. Either way, though, we’ll be accelerating in-system at the wallers’ maximum safe pod-towing compensator settings. The screen—that’s us and Admiral Moreno’s battlecruisers—will be well out in front of the wall-of-battle. We’ll be Admiral White Haven’s primary surveillance screen, and we’ll deploy recon drones to supplement our shipboard sensors for relay to the wall. In addition, CruRon Thirty-Three and BatCruRon Five will have primary responsibility for the outer missile defense zone. Because of that—” laying out the operation’s parameters clearly and concisely, and Brandy sipped coffee as she listened.
Whatever “the wallers’ maximum pod-towing compensator settings” actually mean. I thought the compensator settings didn't matter as long as the pods were inside the wedge. Did I miss something?
Unlike quite a few of Sixth Fleet’s personnel, she’d seen combat. She knew how ugly it could be. But this time, the Navy would be attacking the Peeps, not the other way around, and she smiled vengefully as she contemplated that minor difference.
That is the difference I preached on and on about if the MA attacks first. It seems kind of hard for me to imagine a more exciting war if the MA happens to attack the galaxy first.
Guess who
has come to dinner.
.
.
.
The artist formerly known as cthia.
Now I can talk in the third person.