penny wrote:At any rate, the statement by the author that they are too short ranged to be used as weapons would be unnecessary if the range is only centimeters; what an understatement, 'eh? Not that we collective masses are correct, but I think we were settling on kilometers of range. And kilometers of range is still plenty enough to destroy an unlucky ship whose wedge might happen to run aground of a highly concentrated area of gravity.
Then again, kilometers of range would be enough to act as a weapon. shrug
Note that if it has only kilometers of range (say a few dozen) the spider ship would need to be
inside the wedge of the target before the spider emitter was within range
(Heck the ship's sidewalls, which are tucked well back inside the wedge, are themselves 10 km away from the hull)
Kilometers is definitely not enough to be an effective weapon; not against ships. And why bother using something so insanely short ranged when SD weigh grasers can shred a ship from nearly 500,000 km away?
Even a destroyer has a wedge that's about 100 km on a side; so something like a Wolfhound would sit about 50 km back from the edge of it's wedge.
(Slightly closer to the front and back both because of ship's length but also because of wedge angle foreshortening it somewhat)And with an SD(P) you're looking at a wedge that's 330 or 340 km on a side!
Don't forget that even a grav-lance, with it's IIRC 250,000 km range, is considered too short range to be an effective weapon!
And if by some miracle a spider ship
could sneak to within 50km of an enemy warship without being seen it'd be placing itself at
extreme risk to do so. Even a fairly small shift to the target's heading could accidently slap its wedge right into the spider ship; with fatal consequences to the spider. That's like trying to attack a tank by sneaking under it as it's driving cross country -- any steering input and you're going to end up squashed whether they see you or not.