MAD-4A wrote:MaxxQ wrote:… if not impossible, to do turrets…Plasma…The capacitors so often mentioned in the books are plasma capacitors, fed directly from the reactors. These caps store and convert the plasma into useable energy for the lasers, grasers, and missile tubes to use. The problem is that plasma doesn't like to turn once it's moving in a given direction. It can be done, but it's difficult, and the turns are pretty wide. We at BuNine have, in a *very* general and loose way, figured it out, and it's fairly space-intensive.
The capacitor rings for each mount are visible, and very obvious, in my renders, but the plasma feeds *to* the caps from the reactors aren't there... yet...
Not sure where your getting the “plasma” tech – haven’t seen it anywhere but:
Ummm... BuNine. It's there under my name. That's part of our job for David - coming up with ideas and reasons for why things are the way they are in the Honorverse. This is our current explanation for how plasma tech works. As always, it's subject to change, but so far RFC hasn't pooh-poohed the idea, so...
MAD-4A wrote:MaxxQ wrote:…The problem is that plasma doesn't like to turn once it's moving in a given direction…Given that, to have turrets, unless they're lined up directly above or below the reactors (which would work for only four turrets at best), you're going to have at a minimum, two turns in the plasma lines…
If this is so (I presume your going with 2 reactors) then you could only have 2 broadside mounts & 1 chase (directly lined up with the reactor) any other would need at least 1 90deg turn from the central conduit coming out of the reactor (presumably down the ships core) turning out to the mount itself. (how else dose the Grazer 1/2 way between the 2 reators get it's feed?) & Pod layers couldn’t have that, as the core is reserved for the pod bay. Anyway if they can produce artificial gravity fields strong enough to drag 8mil tons along @ 400+ Gs & others small (& harmless to the user) enough to be used in a had gun, then using gav fields to force plasma to turn 90deg should be old tech.
Reread what I wrote. I was specifically talking about turrets, but I will agree that for broadside mounts that yes, there would have to be a minimum of one turn. I never said that there wouldn't be, and in fact, that is taken into account for my renders, although it's not modeled yet. Turrets would require a minimum of two turns, as well as rotating joints - at least one if there's no elevation for the turret, and two if there is.
I'm not exactly sure yet what the other guys in BuNine have come up with as the mechanism for "turning" a plasma stream, but I wouldn't be surprised if Gravitics has something to do with it. But as I *also* stated in my earlier post on this, the equipment will be pretty bulky, which would affect how it fits into a turret. Some of the preliminary sketches I've seen have some fairly massive "black boxes" at the turns. Oh, and I think we've also decided that there are no 90° turns in the plasma feed lines. At most, there are 45° turns, which, of course means that to make a 90° turn, you'll need two 45's.
Which takes up more room.
MAD-4A wrote:MaxxQ wrote:…Not to mention, somewhere you're going to need a rotating joint that can contain the plasma stream. That's a definite weakness.
Point – but they're not using plasma weapons. You don’t need plasma in the weapon itself. If its being used as an energy transfer medium, then you would need to convert it to usable energy (something that wont fry the components on the first test shot) before it’s transferred to the gun mount. This converter would be “under“ the turret (where the ready service mag. is on gun turrets) and just the transfer cables would need to go into the turret itself.
Again, reread what I wrote. The capacitors are what "converts" the plasma into the energy required to operate the weapons (or whatever equipment they are associated with - impeller rooms have crap-tons of capacitors as well). The capacitors are positioned as close to the device/equipment as possible because it keeps everything together under the armor, with only the plasma feed line from the reactor(s) going through the armored portion of the weapons mount. That's not to say the plasma feed lines aren't armored, but *something* has to go through an armored weapons mount.
MAD-4A wrote:MaxxQ wrote: Lastly, energy weapons mounted in turrets are going to be more vulnerable to incoming fire than buried behind all that broadside armor
Not so. Unless you mounted the guns completely internal. ‘course then the only thing you could shoot would be your own armor. The guns themselves have to be exposed in order to shoot.
True. Textev has them "run out", just like wooden ship cannon. But it's not like they stick out all that far, and they're only vulnerable to shots from certain angles, whereas turrets, by their nature, are exposed a hell of a lot more.
One thing that was mentioned upthread but not commented on much, if at all, was the gunports in the sidewalls. I don't know for sure, but I always figured them to be fixed, and of course, only being opened when a weapon is fired, either energy or missile. I seem to recall a mention that they are fixed, but whether it was from a Pearl or just speculation here, I can't recall.
Either way, if they *are* fixed, then turrets are out the airlock anyway, unless they're only used to fire out the throat and kilt. Oh, but that's what chasers are for.
Even if they're *not* fixed, I don't see turrets being introduced in the Honorverse, at least not for warships. There's already textev for them being used on assault shuttles and such, but not warships. Don't ask me for specific reasons, but speculating, I would say that it might be because David wants to keep the Age of Sail analog. His universe, his rules. I've seen no indication that turrets will be trending in the Honorverse, and feel pretty confident in saying that we never will see them.
Edit: And has already been mentioned, there's already a crap-ton of stuff on the dorsal and ventral surfaces anyway, especially the ventral having all those pesky boat bays taking up *so* much room.