Title | Posted |
---|---|
Pre-war alliance strategy | Feb 2007 |
Deep-penetration & commerce raiding strategy | Feb 2007 |
Deep-penetration strategy | Feb 2007 |
Strategic attrition | Feb 2007 |
Safeholdian ship design | Mar 2007 |
Baron High Ridge's fate | Dec 2007 |
<em>Saganami-C</em> vs a pre-war superdreadnought | Dec 2007 |
Climax to the Battle of Manticore | Jan 2008 |
Removing Giancola from office | Feb 2008 |
PICAs and military manpower needs | Feb 2008 |
A collection of posts by David Weber containing background information for his stories, collected and generously made available Joe Buckley.
(1) Missile tubes have hatches.
(2) Grasers require more internal hull volume than lasers, but the weapons bay hatches are approximately the same size for both.
(3) Hatches slide; they are not hinged.
(4) Most navies use oval hatches. This is simply a matter of taste.
(5) Missile and energy weapon bays are normally sealed with hatches so that they can be pressurized for maintenance purposes. When the ships clear for action, they evacuate atmosphere from all the outer sections of the hull, including the weapons bays.
(6) Wayfarer's "hatch" problems included her need to mount (and conceal):
(a) energy weapons,
(b) counter-missile launcher stations;
(c) laser clusters;
(d) sensor emitters a merchant ship had any business mounting; and
(d) LAC bays.(7) You can use radar to map a starship hull in the HH universe, but not at extreme ranges.
(8) The need to conceal the presence of Wayfarer's weapons and sensor suite occurred both whenever the ship was in orbit and pretending to be a merchie and, secondly, whenever a pirate actually got close enough to board her. If you want to suck Mr. Pirate in nice and close, you need to look very inoffensive when he gets close enough to actually see you visually.