Yes, but high frequencies have an extremely short range, and lowBFalcon said:Can you send radio signals through water at all?
frequencies require huge antenna arrays and have an extremely
low data transfer rate. So, for almost all practical purposes, radio
signals are useless under water.
The ship would have to remain stationary or on a specific courseThe message torpedo is a good idea, but how does it find its way back to the right ship?
to enable the torpedo (actually a torpedo shaped robot) to return
to the ship. Of course a disadvantage, but depending on the ship's
depth still better than having to dive all the way to the surface and
back down again.
Thinking of my setting, there are quite often hypercanes with a windYou don't need the networked commsat to sink in the event of a storm, unless you want it to be unavailable to the players once in a while... a long enough cable that allowed a degree of drift would be enough to compensate for tides and wave amplitude.
speed of up to 500 km/h and waves 30 m high, so this could be a bit
much for buoy and cable, diving until the worst weather is over seems
reasonable.
Yes, probably, it would only have to be protected against "squatters"I do wonder if something like carbon fibre weave wouldn't be suitable for the cable "chain", to be honest...
like coral, which could otherwise make a cleaning schedule necessary
to remove their additional weight from the cable.