DFW said:If a pilot was stupid enough to go for hypersonic reentry, yes. However, with the ability to negate gravity, you can enter the atmosphere at 1 mph if you wanted.
There have been some threads here regarding why this doesn't work out so well in practice, especially in any system where you have lots of things in orbit to collide with. But that's certainly a consideration.
DFW said:BTW - I didn't say no streamlining, I'm talking about no lifting surfaces (airframe). A 20 ton launch has better streamlining (reduced drag) than something with a lifting surface (induced drag), parasitic drag being equal.
Maybe the problem then is the rules' choice of words. If we go back to "first principles", I believe that the rules say a hull with fins or other atmospheric control surfaces will be more maneuverable in an atmosphere than one without those surfaces, and that a hull with no streamlining at all cannot enter an atmosphere without great difficulty.
And if I understand your other posts, you disagree with this assessment for hulls that have gravitic drives, right? Or maybe it would be more accurate to say that you disagree that a "standard" hull with a gravity drive should be less maneuverable than a non-gravitic "streamlined" hull?