You leave (at least) one end open because (as I said in the first sentence of that quote) the author said you couldn't simultaneously close them both.Relax wrote:Jonathan_S wrote: You want a spherical sidewall because, even with bow walls, there are still large chinks in the armor of impeller + sidewalls (because we're told physics says you can't close the bow and stern stress bands simultaneously -- so you have to leave one end unprotected).
I had the impression that even in combat they aren't under impeller most of the time -- that's just for if they have to reposition, say to spread out to cover gaps where another fort was destroyed, or to dodge frac-c ballistic attacks.
But if under impeller say the fort chose to leave it's stern open (as that opening is smaller) - an missile passing behind it within +/- 3.84 to 3.87° horizontally and +/- 7.56 to 7.63° vertically of it's current long axis has a shot on some of the ship unprotected by any sidewall (narrower ranges means LOS all the way to the bow, wider only gives LOS to the stern).
That's not vast, but it's way bigger than the zero vulnerable angles a spherical sidewall gives you.
But why have the ends open at all? You are outside the hyperlimit. There is zero reason to only run a buckler(allows acceleration) May as well have a massive bow/stern wall.
Only fly in the ointment is we do not know the actual STRENGTH of a spherical sidewall and how much mass/power it requires compared to SDP bow/stern/sidewalls or equivalent sidewall strength as spherical. It could be, massively(pardon the pun) in favor of spherical. If so, can still use hyper generator etc to get to the other systems.
Where is the 10X slower coming from? 600G vrs 150G is 4X. I thought new grav plates 150G = 1 G instead of the 75G shown in books previously and it was only when pushed beyond this that another ~75G = 5G apparent when talking about the MALIGN Sharks? Hrmm, Mission of Honor?
Oh well, gotta go, dinner and not sure I will be able to reply much. Busy, but wanted to relax some and peruse the forum.
["Ashes of Victory"]the physics of the wedge meant only one aspect, bow or stern, could be closed at any given moment, but it gave a Ferret's skipper a much more flexible choice of breakaway vectors.[/quote]
So even if you don't want to accelerate a spherical sidewall gives full protection in a way that side + bow wall can't. OTOH the wedge + all available 'walls does provide sensor blocking and invulnerability from two directions in a way the spherical wall can't provide at all.
(FWIW even if you can combine a stern buckler with a full bow wall -- which I can't find any statements about in the books -- the bucker, based on the descriptions, only seems to protect against fire from a very narrow angle; virtually just from dead astern. so it doesn't shrink the size of the aft vulnerable zone by all that much. Useful in a one on one energy fight, and better than nothing if you have to do a straight pursuit, but like the physical shield it was named for it'd take skill to defend yourself with such a small protection)
And the ~10x faster is how much faster a ship (with compensators) can accelerate under sail than it can under impeller. Pushing the Invictus's accel from a normal space 613.3g to a sail-powered nearly 6,133g

Taking the actual acceleration difference between it and something still limited to 150g on grav plates from 4x to 40x.
That acceleration while under sail in a grav wave comes from SVW's Universe of Honor Harrington appendix [quote="Short Victorious War"]One might expect admirals to avoid grav waves if forced to fight in hyper, but doing so is tantamount to breaking off the action. The reason is simple: a ship under Warshawski sail can pull almost ten times the acceleration it could under impeller drive.[quote]