No, I'm
not forgetting the psuedoacceleration from Hyperspace, like I pointed out in my last post.
If the Omega's forward thrusters can put out the same thrust as the main engines (as they would have to do, to slow the ship at the same rate as the main engines accelerate it), then why aren't they as big? If those openings at the front can put out the same thrust as the main engines, why doesn't it just use those as main engines as well, since they're much smaller and less bulky? In any case, what about the Hyperion or Olympus?
The Centauri ships have reaction drives, same as the EA and Narn. They may have some sort of gravitic technology, but that is a secondary source of propulsion. In fact, the only ships without obvious thrusters are the Minbari and Shadows. Even the
Vorlons use reaction engines, although they're probably enhanced somehow. It doesn't matter how the computer interprests the motions of the controls, it's how the thing moves through space that's important, and it can be plainly observed that, most of the time, they fly like Mustangs and Sturmoviks, not Apollo CMs and Soyuz capsules
Supemaneouvrable, Agile; same idea, you gt my drift. Been a while since I fought against a Whitestar
And what I meant by the ships moving like ocean vessels is wide, slow turns; not once did we see, IIRC, a capital ship pivoting, so it's nose was pointed away from its direction of travel. If the ships behaved realistically, the Asimov liner would be, for its size, the most agile ship in the EA
I've always watched SF shows and assumed that what's onscreen is 'actually happening' - as if it were a History Channel documentary. If you go with author's intent, you run into problems with different script drafts, ad-libbing cast, and the author simply not knowing what he was talking about. JMS admitted that there were no set 'stats' for the ships, that they behaved as he needed them to do to fit the plot, while Joss Whedon confessed that "science makes his brain hurt". Apart from being a sad admission rom an otherwise intelligent man, it makes playing the Serenity RPG a pain in the arse. Given that the written word is so mercurial, all you can rely on to make solid comparisons of ships' performance is what happens onscreen (which leads to such things, incidentally, as the Ewoks being exterminated by the nuclear winter brought on by the destruction of the 2nd Death Star).