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If there is no friction the thing can stick straight out sideways and should therefore be able to look ahead and behind.
Condottiere said:Which is why I mentioned a long lazy cruise.
Triangulation wouldn't really work for anything directly in front or behind, but you'd know that someone was trying to sneak up from behind.
In front, you could send a tweety bird.
Moppy said:If there is no friction the thing can stick straight out sideways and should therefore be able to look ahead and behind.
Moppy said:Yea but they aren't towed arrays. As I said earlier I was limiting my response to things on actual cables.
wbnc said:Well, I have plenty of input on the towed concept...with all the potential weaknesses, inefficiency, etc...
would a slightly modified system in which the 'tow cable" feeds power to the drone to reduce it's size, and expense, and power internal maneuver systems to allow it to pace with the parent ship be a potential factor.
when I sat down and started thinking about this.....I had started with the idea that the towed, or tethered arrays, would be more of an add-on, or alternate for a narrow range of applications rather than a replacement for drones.or simply part of another ship option.phavoc said:wbnc said:Well, I have plenty of input on the towed concept...with all the potential weaknesses, inefficiency, etc...
would a slightly modified system in which the 'tow cable" feeds power to the drone to reduce it's size, and expense, and power internal maneuver systems to allow it to pace with the parent ship be a potential factor.
Having the cable provide power to the array is certainly an option. Something to consider is would the electrical current cause interference to the sensors that you are trying to keep away from the 'noise' of the towing ship? Easy enough to put batteries on the array if you are trying to make it super-sensitive.
I think so long as your towing ship is stooging around a system at very low velocities (no more than 1G) it would be within reason to say your arrays are physically attached to your ship, that they draw power from the ship and use ion thrusters to keep pace with your ship. That would eliminate a number of problems. When you need more sensitivity, the towing ship simply cuts its drives and the arrays do the same, thus they would stay in the same place relative to the towing ship. The thrusters could be used to offset the gyrations that your towing ship might put them through, within reason, and also allow for a much faster recovery speed since they can decelerate before being pulled onboard.
I am of the opinion powered drones would be superior, but there's nothing to say you couldn't find reasonable and logical ways to make the towed version work out.
Condottiere said:Re: Ship Design Philosophy
Postby Condottiere » Sun Aug 30, 2015 10:09 am
Spaceships: Sensors and Stealth
I had this thought that in order to minimize electronic emissions from a ship, they'd put the sensors in a pod, and trail it a couple of kilometres behind it, but actually, all it probably does is to have a better chance on locating other vessels trying hard to become invisible.
For some reason, I came up with a variant, where you have a five thousand tonne pod acting as the platform for a distributed array, though at that size, it pretty much can be self-propelled and autonomous, so kinda pointless. Though for a dreadnought, it would add another platform for another sensor suite while underway, though I'm sure there much more efficient ways to achieve the same effect.
Though if you keep your velocity, and switch off the manoeuvre drives, the pod could be small enough just to support an extended array, which does seem like a viable option. Though once you want to use the manoeuvre drive, it's time to unextend those arrays.
That would be why there's a cable.
Rick said:The very first thing that I thought of was the Schlock Mercenary "Very Dangerous Array" - a deployed series of missiles with enhanced sensor packages that act as enhanced sensor array drones and missiles.
Could you make the drone small enough to fit into a missile warhead, I wonder? :twisted:
phavoc said:Moppy said:Yea but they aren't towed arrays. As I said earlier I was limiting my response to things on actual cables.
Well, if you are talking cables, it couldn't stick straight out since a cable has flexibility.
phavoc said:Rick said:The very first thing that I thought of was the Schlock Mercenary "Very Dangerous Array" - a deployed series of missiles with enhanced sensor packages that act as enhanced sensor array drones and missiles.
Could you make the drone small enough to fit into a missile warhead, I wonder? :twisted:
Yes, but the payload package would be relatively small (i.e. what you could cram into the space of a warhead). But you could build that sort of electronics package today.
Moppy said:phavoc said:Moppy said:Yea but they aren't towed arrays. As I said earlier I was limiting my response to things on actual cables.
Well, if you are talking cables, it couldn't stick straight out since a cable has flexibility.
Why not? Put a weight or thruster on the end and eject it sideways from a launcher while you're drifting. Depending on available technology, it's possible that you may have to recover your towed array before changing course.
Condottiere said:I don't think anyone's taken the position that it's an optimal solution.
In the absence of the tractor beam, and if big enough clamps aren't around, possibly the only way to tow stuff in deep space.
Got that part trying to figure out exactly how to compensate for those drawbacks.phavoc said:Condottiere said:I don't think anyone's taken the position that it's an optimal solution.
In the absence of the tractor beam, and if big enough clamps aren't around, possibly the only way to tow stuff in deep space.
Not saying it can't be done. Just saying it's a really bad idea and it wouldn't work like it does in the ocean. Just include the consequences.
phavoc said:Moppy said:phavoc said:Well, if you are talking cables, it couldn't stick straight out since a cable has flexibility.
Why not? Put a weight or thruster on the end and eject it sideways from a launcher while you're drifting. Depending on available technology, it's possible that you may have to recover your towed array before changing course.
How do you account for the fact that the ship can move under thrust, but the platform would not? And a weight doesn't do anything in zero-G. Unless you plan on physically ejecting it to give you some opposite thrust.
A thruster could work so long as it's strong enough to move the combined mass.
But in general cables are a bad idea in zero-G and a vacuum.