PainRack wrote:Before you start shoving the insults, read what I said. It showed an upper limit as per canon, because we have no evidence to the contary that the hovertank repulsorlifts could lift the tank higher in the canonical data.
Unless of course, you sincerely believe that its easier to go to a higher height.
No, you're an imbecile who still does not get it. Quite frankly, you've had limits explained several times now, and it really is a basic concept. If you don't get it by now, you're an idiot.
The asteroid vaporization calcs are lower limits in canon: we know the weapon at least supplies the energy to vaporize the rock.
In this case, it doesn't matter if we know it should be more difficult to go higher: the only limit placed by observation is that it can go at least the observed height.
Upper limits only occur when a technology fails to reach above an observed output at maximum performance: if you had an asteroid baring down on an unshielded ISD bridge like in TESB, and they shot at it only blowing up a few dozen meters of it, that would be an upper limit; it is obvious at maximum power it could only achieve the observed result, therefore it cannot go higher.
TPM does not establish an upper limit on repulsor altitudes, period.
PainRack wrote:Getting off the Robert brown angle, let's examine this technically. Incidently, logic states that you don't design a ground unit to fly. Does a hovercraft hover 10 meters off the ground?
When your average battle rifle ranges in the 10 km range and the light tanks double as projectile artillery, it makes sense to allow them to rise to easily navigate rough terrain, as well as recieve the maximum utility with her artillery weapons.
PainRack wrote:Unfortunately, one is without logic. The other, while based on a different perspective, has one. One does not design ground units to fly.
It does when they mount artillery and one of the stated purposes of repulsorlift vehicles is to more easily negotiate rough terrain. Perhaps you ignore the existance of another line-of-sight artillery-mounting vehicle, the AT-AT, which relied on elevation to achieve greater effectiveness, in line with AOTC ICS' remarks on the matter.
Its plainly obvious that with line-of-sight projectile cannon mounted low on the vehicle, that it must climb in altitude to use them, such that they're not limited in effective range by the nearest foothill. Or do you, like Brown, think that it'd be smart to show your spiffy max altitude abilities while attacking infantry at close range, thus exposing your underside, one of your least armored surfaces?
PainRack wrote:However, canonically, it doesn't make logical sense to build a ground tank, to fly.
It does for reasons stated earlier.