penny wrote:A thought. Since the equation with compensation is concerned with volume and not weight, there is no reason those containers shouldn't be made of the strongest metal possible. Perhaps made of the same metal as bulkheads. They are moved around by beams and countergrav anyway. So if these containers are locked in place, they should offer some buffering against all but the most catastrophic blasts. That strength of material might also be recoverable.
@tlb. Yeah, I remember textev saying that freighters are configurable too. I just can't see why that would not mean that their “partitions” are movable for certain shape loads. Much like the cargo hold of 18-wheeled transit vehicles and some moving and storage vehicles. And I see no logical reason those reconfigurable partitions shouldn't pull double duty as blast doors.
The equation deals with weight AND volume; anything much heavier than an SD needs to use gravity plates and not a compensator: think of fortresses and maybe the Leonard Detweiler- class. From "The Universe of Honor Harrington" in More Than Honor:
(1) Background (General) wrote:Then, in 1384 pd, a physicist by the name of Shigematsu Radhakrishnan added another major breakthrough in the form of the inertial compensator. The compensator turned the grav wave (natural or artificial) associated with a vessel into a sort of "inertial sump," dumping the inertial forces of acceleration into the grav wave and thus exempting the vessel's crew from the g forces associated with acceleration. Within the limits of its efficiency, it completely eliminated g force, placing an accelerating vessel in a permanent state of internal zero-gee, but its capacity to damp inertia was directly proportional to the power of the grav wave around it and inversely proportional to both the volume of the field and the mass of the vessel about which it was generated.
The problem is how big do you want the partitions to be? If they are too big and take the full effect of a blast, they will never be strong enough to stay anchored to the walls. Remember Honor floating around inside the Wayfarer in Honor Among Enemies:
Chapter 5 wrote:Honor's cutter drifted through the enormous hatch of HMS Wayfarer's Number One Hold. The small craft was a tiny minnow against the vast, star-speckled maw of cargo doors which could easily have admitted a destroyer, and the hold they served was built to the same gargantuan scale. Work lights created pockets of glaring brilliance where parties of yard dogs labored on the final modifications, but there was no atmosphere to diffuse the light, and most of the stupendous alloy cavern was even blacker than the space beyond the hatch.
Where you might have walls is between cargo holds, but I do not think those walls would either be movable (because the cargo doors are fixed) or strong enough to contain a blast.