Like Charles83, I too would like to defend the tWTMNBN* as being neither a bad decision on Weber’s part, nor a bad design decision in-universe; iff one reads the early books, it is clearly (or rather was before the days of missile dominance) a valid weapons fit for capital ships of an navy that knew it might eventually find itself forced into an energy engagement against a superior weight of metal over its homeworld(s), aka the RMN. In light of that likely scenario, sacrificing a percent or two of the broadside armaments (which averaged heavier than the enemy’s on a per ship basis for their capital ships) for a chance to fill an inside straight draw on that fateful day, is not necessarily a bad decision.
Crippling a CL by pulling two thirds of its broadside loadout to fit a system that would only be usable in filling such a tactical inside straight, now
that was a bad design decision … but Hemphill realized that after the first series of trials of the testbed. ;)
So the RMN’s use of this weapons system on their capital ships is a quite reasonable design compromise in light of the threat they expected to face during the Roger III buildup, and not a mistake on Weber’s part.
It cannot be his fault that various hordes have since repeatedly failed to internalize even the basic aspects of the strategic situation, options and operational experience available (or unavailable) to BuShips and the Admiralty at large, and yet have felt themselves expert enough to ride roughshod over the designs and tactics the RMN chose to build and adopt; that he in the end got fed up with explaining this particular point over and over does not invalidate his inclusion of the system in a story written at a time predating it becoming clear what the ratio of jerks to nerds on the internet would (d)evolve into in the years ahead. :-/
Just my two cents.
*But as we shouldn’t mention it, I will hold my tongue instead. ;)
FriarBob wrote:Charles83 wrote:FriarBob wrote:
No, I think you're right... but I also think that was the point. He was making a bad joke about the weapon-whose-name-must-never-be-spoken-again from On Basilisk Station.
But despite the lunatics that inhabit the asylum over in the Honorverse forum, Weber is very good about coming up with MUCH better designs than certain lunatics are willing to give him credit for. And that was the point. Outside of that one mistake on his part, he's always come up with logical designs, and logical weapon systems, and logical weapon use strategies... and that despite years of effort on the part of said lunatics none of us are smart enough (or at least not well-enough versed in history + human psychology + physics + naval constraints + a few dozen other fields) to come up with better.
And the same applies to Safehold as well. Our problems with his designs here come from our lack of expertise, not his... and/or perhaps our lack of full details...
I don't think that the grav lance was a mistake in his part it was an idea that given the realities of war its useless, to give an example from today, a shotgun is a very good weapon but bringing a shotgun to an open field battle with rifles is stupid, so in little what he wanted to fulfill was that Admiral Sonja Hemphill is a very imaginative scientist and a successful one but sometimes her ideas are not strategically sound in the military realities of the Honorverse, here on Safehold is different since RFC has been giving all of us classes of "Naval History 101" and "Weapon Development Through History 101", so for me personally I think that he hasn't made any mistake (at least any major one), I think he has thought everything and has put every single design and weapon in purpose for different reasons.
Oh and BTW I'm one of the residents of the Asylum of the Honorverse.
You can be a resident and not be an inmate. Hopefully you're the former. I'm an ex-resident because I got sick of the inmates. Now I only visit very briefly, mainly only when I happen to go there in the pursuit of reading every single post Weber has written since the last time I scanned his post history... :)
And he called the weapon a mistake because of the intense insanity it provoked, not because there weren't valid storytelling elements that made its use actually semi-worthwhile. It was proof that Sonja, despite her undeniable brilliance, needed somebody riding herd on her to keep her from running off into outright insanity. For that matter, it was also very useful character development by giving proof that
Honor wasn't perfect either, and that she needed to grow up from her initial "Horrible Hemphill" mantra to realizing that Sonja wasn't a lunatic after all, she was just occasionally wrong.
I'm sure Weber has made mistakes too, but like you I feel that whatever they are they are likely to be fairly trivial, especially with so much history of wet-navy warfare (of which he is undeniably an expert) upon which he can draw to base his ideas.