While Fel ultimately decides what technology the humans do and do not have access to, we can do that today. In fact there are four ways we can do this. And these humans are supposed to have a 6 year headstart on us. Unless you can mention those three ways that I can think of, or come up with clever ways of your own, then you have no business telling me that it can't be done. And just to be clear, only one of those ways involves turning them off.afrigeek wrote:They would still retain satellite capability. And while that would add a latency of about 300-500ms to their operations, it is not really a big deal.
Low tollerance for damage when hit by a missile above the waterline. Modern ASM hits will tear a ship in half twice the size of an LCS, so no big surprise. Aluminium is not magically weaker than steel. Of course 18" battleship plate armour probably would be magically weaker than Earth Dragon claws <sigh> but that's a different issue. I may be remembering wrong, but I don't think the Water Dragons have magically enhanced strength, so it's moot.I am taking this from recent reports by the navy to congress about those new ship types which they themselves admit that LCS ships have a very low tolerance for damage.I think you know about as much about naval architecture as the Dragons do. Which is kinda my point.The dragons seeem to only think they understand what they are planning. I really don't think they've put any thought into how you 'catch' a 20 ton spinning blade, or how the prop shaft inside the ship will react if you do.
Hoppy:
LCS weaponry is modular. One definately and the other probably has volume set aside for VLS launchers. A navalised MLRS pod has been loudly talked about. So they can and probably will be upgunned at some point. I know of at least one Navy exercise used to 'prove' how useless they are, was obviously and heavily rigged. OVeral the LCS are more experimental than is usual in a naval class. But that doesn't make them flawed.
And what exactly do you think will happen to the prop shafts inside some of these ships, when one end is suddenly being held stationary and the other has a hundred thousand foot-pounds of torque attached to it? Do the words 'sudden mechanical failure' mean anything to you? How about shrapnal? Or explosion?As for propellers, you're assuming the water dragons are going to rip them off using their paws or something and forgetting their ability to do water magic. To use the water itself to rip off rudders or propellers by means of magic.
'But they can do magic' is not an instant I WIN button, though Fel can make it one if he wishes. Magic is just applied knowledge, which makes it a form of technology. It can do fantastic things, but it is not invaulnerable to counter measures, and does not exist in a vacuum. The humans have plenty of those and are far more experienced in using them against intelligent enemies in intelligent ways. The sea dragons think they can stop the ships without killing anyone. I find that to be a laughable expression of both overconfidence and arrogence.