Sigtrygg said:
Yes it does - CT '77 edition m-drive burns fuel, 1st edition HG the m-drive is a fusion rocket.
Neither of these are valid anymore though - they were superseded by later editions of CT. The later version of HG (1980) says that "fuel consumption for M-Drives is inconsequential" (pg 17), and I can find no mention of it being able to be used as a fusion rocket. So they cannot be used as part of this argument. By the end of CT, there were no details for how M-Drives worked at all, beyond the fact that they used no fuel - that's as far as I can find anyway, it's hard to look through lots of books and PDFs with the info scattered all over the place.
Thruster plates in TNE are now an optional drive that doesn't exist in the OTU. The description of thrusters was lifted directly from MT. It was so naff thet it was changed in T4 and T5.
It doesn't matter that they're optional in TNE and it doesn't matter that you think it was "naff" - the explanation still stands and does not disagree with what came before.
Very true. But consider this, read MgT High Guard, page 57 "A Gravitic drive is a smaller version of the drive plates used by larger spacecraft, and propels the craft using artificial gravity."
Sounds a bit different to the MT, TNE and T4 versions yes?
A bit, but not enough to make a significant difference.
The communication problem here is twofold:
1) You are stubbornly refusing to acknowledge that "using artificial gravity" means anything other than "must be creating a gravity well in front of the ship that the ship then falls towards". It means nothing of the sort - it just means that gravitic technology is being used as the basis of the Thruster Plate. Gravitics is gravity manipulation. It doesn't necessarily involve "gravity wells" any more than spinning a spacestation to generate "artificial gravity" does.
2) I am working from the principle that "Any knowledge from Traveller canon fills gaps in later canon". You seem to be working from the principle of "Gaps remain unfilled unless the knowledge originates in the same edition". Which is fair enough in some cases, but when the current edition doesn't provide that knowledge then what are we expected to do? It seems that you think we should just assume that it's unknown, which I disagree with since there is an answer right there in previous editions that applies to the same situation.
You claim that explanations from other versions of the game based on different technological paradigms can be use to explain the MgT maneuver drive, but they can't.
And you haven't provided any evidence to back up that opinion at all.
CT cannot be used to support your case since its initial ideas were superseded by later editions that then didn't elaborate on the technology. But it's obvious that the designers had a change of heart about how they thought that M-Drives worked then.
MT introduced the ideas of Thruster Plates (they weren't introduced by DGP either - the description I quoted was from the Referee's Companion, which was a GDW product).
TNE continued to use that description, though Thruster Plates were presented as an alternate technology.
T4 actually used both HEPLaR (introduced in TNE) AND Thruster Plates, though it slightly modified the way the Thruster Plate technology worked. The problem with that though is that it was set over 1000 years before CT, MT, and TNE. So historically speaking should we be assuming that ships initially used HEPLaR and Thruster Plates, then abandoned HEPLaR by the CT era, then started using it again in TNE? (for added spanner in the works, GT Interstellar Wars - set a few thousand years before T4 - just uses "Reactionless Thrusters") That's a whole other can of worms though.
MGT says that M-Drives use "Drive Plates" (MGT HG pg 57) and are "gravitic" in origin (MGT HG pg 42). That agrees with MT, TNE, and T4.
I repeat my earlier quote from MgT HG:
A Gravitic drive is a smaller version of the drive plates used by larger spacecraft, and propels the craft using artificial gravity.
The only way artificial gravity can move a ship forward is if the ship is falling into an artificial gravity field.
And as I keep showing, that is an assumption on your part, and it is incorrect. "using artificial gravity" means "using the technology of artificial gravity (i.e. gravitics)" not literally using gravity as something to fall towards. Otherwise artificial gravity on a spaceship's decks means that you're literally creating gravity wells on every deck of the ship, which is ridiculous. It's a poor choice of words for them use, granted - but they are clearly referring to gravitic technology, not a literal gravity well.
For another thing, if a ship is supposedly falling towards a gravity well, then the drive plates should be on the front of the ship (so they can generate and project the field in the right direction) shouldn't they?