Title | Posted |
---|---|
Ground warfare | Oct 2002 |
Hyperspace near a Wormhole Junction | Oct 2002 |
Kinetic infrastructure attacks | Oct 2002 |
Kinetic anti-ship attacks | Oct 2002 |
Maneuver, combat and missiles | Oct 2002 |
Marines aboard ship | Oct 2002 |
MetalStorm missile tubes | Oct 2002 |
Post-battle debris concerns | Oct 2002 |
FTL LACs | Oct 2002 |
LACs as parasites | Oct 2002 |
A collection of posts by David Weber containing background information for his stories, collected and generously made available Joe Buckley.
A suggestion has been made that it would make sense to put drives into shipkiller missiles of sufficient power to make them immune to wedge kill by a counter-missile. Is this practical? Could it be done as the final stage of a MDM?
No, it isn't. And it won't be -- ever. I believe we've had this discussion before. You cannot -- not "it would be hard," not "only possible with great difficulty," but cannot -- build a missile drive sufficiently powerful to take out another missile (or counter-missile) drive without being taken out itself. End of story. The physical size constraints make it impossible. That's why counter-missiles have used their impeller wedges as their primary missile-killing weapon for so long.