StarWarsStarTrek wrote:And I could compile an even larger list of figures supporting the ICS, and they'll all fall conveniently within a few orders of magnitude. Unlike yours, they'll also be internally consistent.
You haven't; and I'm pretty sure you
can't. The sources that actually indicate ICS figures are
required are basically non-existent. The sources that are even
remotely compatible with the ICS are few and far between - for example,
Slave Ship's famous "gigatonnage" line. And I wouldn't even say that the ICS books in and of themselves are internally consistent.
The fact that the pan shots and the close up shots are erroneously different
In the event that there is a pan shot that shows something, which is in fact typically not the case.
is proof that either the source is unreliable or there is something fishy going on. Either way, you cannot cherry pick portions of a comic that happen to support your argument, even though the very next panel supports a far higher yield estimate.
I'm not cherry-picking. That's for documentarians, who pretend not to know when dramatic license is being exercised, and take a snippet in isolation while trying to ignore plot and authorial intent.
Say that we do have two scenes, a pan shot showing enormous mushroom clouds engulfing a planet, and then a close intimate shot showing the planet's surface with the heroes running around in panic as things blow up and burn. Which is the more important piece of information? The latter. It's more detailed, more intimate, and by the fact that the heroes actually survived being out in the open as those turbolaser bolts landed, we can dismiss the pan shot as visual hyperbole. We already
knew that the illustration only had limited accuracy - real explosions don't look like comic book drawings of explosions - and there's nothing that ties that shot in with other information.
And they also show shots that are visible from orbit. Like the Taris bombardment from KOTOR, where the shots get progressively stronger as the camera zooms out, until they are multi megaton from orbit.
Multi-megaton, unfortunately, remains inconsistent with the ICS.
For example, Troy Denning's Star by Star has a bomb small enough to pass as a personal communications device making a 1 km fireball, has fighters doing strafes at near C speeds, then has long range turbolasers having low kiloton yields, and then turbolasers vaporizing 10 km orbital mirrors.
Which is
still orders of magnitude below the ICS figures.
Actually, the only really inconsistent part is making fighter strafes at near-
c speeds. Turbolasers being able to eventually deliver megatons, individual long-range bolts falling in the low kiloton range, those are quite consistent with the gold standard of the 1-10 terajoule proton torpedo. The claim of a 1 km fireball will, I believe, need to be backed up; an actual 1 km fireball leads to a much larger
blast than 1 km, while a 1 km diameter area of dramatic effect in an illustration would point towards something less powerful than Little Boy, which at 13 kt totally destroyed everything in a circle 1.6 km in radius (i.e., 3 km in diameter).
I wouldn't be surprised to find that the actual quote is rather more innocuous than you're making it out to be.
Whoever wrote the X wing series goes from mentioning kilojoules of energy from laser cannons to proton torpedos turning islands with mountain ranges into slag.
The X-Wing series have a certain measure of inconsistency; however, the incident you mention is one Mr. Oragahn describes in detail
here.
It turns out that the "mountain ranges" touted by Saxtonites was, in fact, describing a single volcanic crater:
Rogue Squadron wrote:Salm reached out and touched the holographic world. The island he selected grew up in place of the world of which it was part. As the image expanded, the computer added buildings, mountains, ion-cannon batteries, and other details of military importance. Two steep mountain chains - the edges of an extinct Volcano's crater - enclosed the base like parentheses.
This is a volcanic isle, not necessarily a large one. The "mountain chains" are something more like
this than the Himalayas. Unfortunately for the Saxtonite interpretation, it turns out that the method of intended destruction was not, in fact, proton torpedo bombardment, but getting the geothermal generator to blow sky-high:
Rogue Squadron wrote:The island, you see, is part of an old Volcano. The generators are geothermal and old and not up to the strain of raising the shield and powering the ion cannons."
"And if they choose to go turtle instead of trying to shoot?"
"The bomber pilot traced a circle around what would have originally been the edge of the crater. To the south the wall had broken down almost completely
and much of the base had been built on the flat stretch of land that linked the volcano and the bay. On the north side of the crater the wall had begun to erode,but it was just a small divot compared to the gap in the south.
"The shield has to cover everything from the beach to the tops of the mountains. On the North side it should be possible to blast through the mountain and open up enough of a gap to let our bombers in. Once we're under the shield, the generators go and its over.
Grand Isle would be no match for two squadrons of Y-wings. In addition to two laser cannons, the Y-wings sported twin ion cannons and two proton torpedo launchers. Each ship carried eight torpedoes, which meant either of the squadrons packed enough firepower to turn the lush, verdant landscape of Grand Isle into a black, smoking mass of liquid rock.
If roughly
two hundred torpedoes can flatten a small volcanic isle, that would be quite a bit more impressive than seen elsewhere in the X-Wing series. Unfortunately, the details don't actually support the idea that Grand Isle is the size of Australia, which is about what's necessary to support ICS figures; and the
details anchor this hyperbolic statement down to a much more basic level.
A shield, powered by a
geothermal tap, is enough to withstand serious attack. Think about that for a minute. It's about as bad as the TIE fighters' solar-electric engines.
Then what is the rest of the energy being used for? To cook dinner?
Drive systems. Especially hyperdrive systems. The energy requirements of space travel itself are
enormous.
Vaporize a small town requires at least high triple digit kilotons as a lower limit.
No. Hiroshima was quite a bit larger than a typical small town - about 350,000 people lived there.
An example of a typical narrative description of the destruction of Hiroshima:
NARRATOR: A half-century has passed since Hiroshima was vaporized in an atomic fireball. People genuinely do talk this way; and the bomb dropped on Hiroshima was 15 kilotons. A single terajoule of yield is sufficient to obliterate a small densely built town of X,000 inhabitants. Thus, a
genuine "lower limit" on that loose narrative description is less than a single kiloton. Not triple digit kilotons.
Vaporizing a small town really could refer to anything in the terajoule or petajoule range. We have roughly
six orders of magnitude of wiggle room if we're being particularly generous. This is, of course, not quite enough to make the ICS seem reasonable. ICS-yield bolts don't vaporize small towns; they instead
They can fire megaton shots, but logically I doubt that light turbolasers would contain such massive overkill against small starfighters that can take no more than a kiloton, at best.
That's putting the cart before the horse - and also not quite getting what the ICS is saying. The ICS says that
light anti-fighter weapons rate at 6 megatons per shot. The ICS also says that ARC-170 shields can dissipate close to a megaton of energy per second.
You're not quite getting the link here. An ISD is 2 million times the size of a Rebel fighter. Logically speaking, if a kiloton torpedo can one-shot an X-Wing or Y-Wing, 2 gigatons (2 million times as much) should be able to one-shot an ISD - if they have the same power/size ratio. Unfortunately, this is
one hundredth of the yield the ICS prescribes for invisibly small weapons on a "troop transport" that is itself barely 15% of the size of an ISD. Saxton is aware of this ratio problem, and so he said that anti-fighter weapons fired multi-megaton bolts, and fighter shields dissipated on the close order of a megaton of energy per second.
Do you see the irony in this? No? Ok. Well, most of the low end showings in TCW are simply too low to be admissible, because they don't fit vaporizing a small town or vaporizing 40 meter asteroids. They have to be higher than those lower limits in order to be admissible as evidence, but they rarely ever are.
I'm afraid that
vaporizing a 40 meter asteroid is a bit of an overconfident overstatement. You see, what we actually see - literally - in the film is inconsistent with the thermal yield necessary to totally vaporize a 40 meter asteroid. The debris is too slow; the explosion takes much too long; et cetera. The VFX, in other words, are a crude approximation, as unrealistic as a cartoon.
What we can say is that an ISD can
blow up an asteroid more or less the size of the
Millennium Falcon. Maybe it's mostly vaporized. Maybe it's partially vaporized, and the parts that aren't flew away as fast-moving debris. The true
lower limit of what's seen in the Hoth asteroid belt is much lower than Brian Young claimed it to be, for this reason. As I said, the G level evidence is actually very flexible.
As far as I'm concerned,
this flexibility is not wide enough to admit the ICS figures. Even if we assume the asteroids were largely vaporized, we still have medium sized bolts longer than the
Falcon barely edging into the megaton range by very generous computations - bolts much larger and brighter than the ones actually striking the
Falcon. And the ICS thinks that medium turbolasers should be firing
tens of gigatons per bolt.
And exactly how are scorchmarks contradicting the ICS? The ICS shows that fusion weapons barely scorch capital ship hulls, and voila; starfighters, which carry fusion weapons, barely scorch their hulls. Is this supposed to be a contradiction?
Because of how severely the ICS thinks that capital ships should outpower fighters. The ICS figures are written with the assumption that the firepower/size and shield/size ratios of large capital ships are identical to fighters - meaning that a fighter shouldn't be able to as much as scratch the hull.
Nobody said that they're worthless. They just typically don't take down capital ships.
Except when they do. And hence the list.
Of course, but Rebel fleets did not routinely try and slam heads against imperial star destroyers.
Rebel fighters routinely slam heads against smaller capital ships all over the EU. Star Destroyers only rarely.
Nobody said that cruisers have several million times the power of sufficiently armed starfighters, of whom can carry weapons in the gigaton range based on ICS calcs. Therefore, your claims that this contradicts the ICS are invalid, because the ICS calcs still adequately explain it. The only starfighter we see specifically quantified in the AOTC ICS is Slave 1, and there is no reason for it go be equipped with capital ship busting torpedos. Therefore, if we assume the ICS to be true, we can deduce high gigaton level capital ship busting torpedos. Nothing here is contradicted or inadequately explained by the ICS.
And if we actually saw it happen, then the explanation would be that the B wings had gigaton level torpedos, and the ICS would remain internally consistent. Your alleged contradictions are explained by the ICS.
The
Slave I is not a fighter. It is substantially larger than a fighter - between one and two orders of magnitude larger, in fact. Its conventional torpedoes, very much
larger than proton torpedoes, are rated at 190 megatons by the ICS - meaning that you would have to launch a
thousand of them to add up to the yield of a single blast from a "medium" turbolaser mount on an
Acclamator. And Fett is supposed to be
armed to the teeth. The ICS does claim his seismic charge is 12 gigatons. It's a large
unguided and
unpropelled bomb, both much larger and much more advanced than a regular proton torpedo - and it would take
seventeen of them to match the ICS yield of a single quad-barreled turbolaser on an Acclamator firing once. Both of these figures are well in excess of the energy actually displayed onscreen in AOTC, of course.
Elsewhere in the EU, two dozen proton torpedoes is sufficient to knock down the shields of a
Victory Star Destroyer, a ship larger and substantially more powerful than an
Acclamator. Given that a
Victory should be able to absorb a lengthy pounding from an
Acclamator - say,
one or more broadsides from the 12x quad medium turbolasers the ICS gives it, which is to say 2.4 teratons per broadside - you need proton torpedoes with not mere gigaton yields, but
hundreds of gigatons. Either that, or there's something
really special about hitting Star Wars capital ships with torpedoes, which would make the relative rarity of torpedoes really silly; it would make it particularly silly that the "outdated"
Victory-class Star Destroyer relies more heavily on missiles. Instead of being the staple of fleet combat, however, capital ship torpedoes are rare.
But obviously the B wing seen was cut, so your point is null.
No, my point is that the
Essential Guide series actually claims that the B-Wing has firepower equivalent to small capital ships. Which is one of the numerous implicit contradictions to the ICS model, in which capital ships are stratospherically superior to fighters.
Meanwhile, darkstar's, for example, calculations don't mesh at all. He claims that the huge streaks of light are heavy turbolasers, and that each are 1.5 megatons. But then he claims that the the power generation of an ISD is only around 500 terawatts, which doesn't make sense at all if it can generate megaton level shots to the point of filling the sky with them. See how it doesn't match up, at all?
Actually, if the
average power generation of an ISD is 500 terawatts, then an ISD could fire a megaton shot about every ten seconds. Which is actually more frequently than we see the very largest bolts. But I don't agree with him, even though I feel that's a perfectly reasonable figure for the sustained average firepower output of an ISD based on documentarian evidence from the films. I think the peak power generation of an ISD is up in the single digit exawatt range. The reason? Space travel is energy-expensive. And this, I think, would be worth going into a new thread on if you want to talk about peak power generation and sustained firepower output.