penny wrote:Best way to do it is to hide the entire operation within the inner workings of a legitimate business / enterprise / company. A large enterprise is expected to draw lots of power. And if it is legit, it can fund the operation.
Indeed, especially if you really meant "legitimate business." In that case, the excess of power draw that isn't converted into economic activity could pass unnoticed. In fact, they may not need to keep a full charge: if they have the necessary power connections to the grid, they may be able to charge the graser at a moment's notice. It may not be as fast as a military installation - the grid operator probably has expert algorithms running that would notice a sudden spike and cut the connection - but you could do it within, say, a quarter hour.
Were the Space Stations in orbit before they were destroyed?
Yes, and in very predictable orbits. We don't know if they were in low, medium, high or stationary orbits, but they were definitely in orbit. Given the amount of time the wedge tugs had to block debris falling on the planets and that some did fall on the city of Yawata on Sphinx, my guess is the stations were in low orbit.
In fact, they were probably not in a
stable orbit in the first place. They were probably at low altitude and using the magic of the HV energy production to keep position over a point in the surface. That would explain even more why the debris fell on the planet: once the station-keeping is removed, it falls on pure gravity.
And is that Just Imperator and not the rest of the Fleet? And is that normal or was that a special case?
The whole of Eighth Fleet was kept in Trevor's Star, not just Imperator, before the Battle of Manticore. The only time they came as a whole to the MBS was during the battle, then stayed as the effective Home Fleet.
A single ship transiting is maybe an hour's inconvenience (because they wouldn't start from the transit lanes), but transiting the full fleet would add a day to any schedule and wreak havoc with the Junction. Therefore, during the war with Haven, keeping Trevor's Star as a base made a lot of sense because they'd be much closer to the targets and that's where they'd set off from. And remember that Trevor's Star was, like Manticore-B, kept mostly as a military reservation, so no enemy spy ships could observe the fleet strengths and exercises.
Where was the RMN component of the Grand Fleet based during the war with the SLN? We aren't told, but my guess is still Trevor's Star, because of the absence of prying eyes and because that would make it much easier for the RHN component to meet and exercise. The travel time for the GSN component would be roughly the same to either the MBS and Trevor's Star. As for the IAN component, for the fight with the MAlign, they'd transit from Gregor, so the
time to reach the other components would be small anyway and the extra inconvenience to the Junction minimal.
If it were only travel time, the actual best place to base those fleets might be the Junction itself, though, making the RHN transit once and the IAN only once, but zero times for the RMN. And they launched through the Beowulf terminus.
Or maybe not. The GA was well aware of the streak drive by this time, so launching from the Junction, through Beowulf, to Warner-Mannerheim and thence to Galton could be observed and the enemy warned. So it's entirely possible they travelled entirely in hyper, from Trevor's Star. Does the timeline fit?