Admiral Valdemar wrote:Have you not factored in smart munitions and nuclear weaponry as a standard load out?
Quite honestly, I hadn't before, and am starting to now. I had assumed the coilgun shells would be "smart" bullets, having their own thrusters for course-corrections even possibly, but hadn't given nuclear armament thought until brought up.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:If you're able to get grunts suits of this calibre, then expense and technical know how are not major burdens, which means having mini-guided missiles or tactical nukes as standard can't be too big a stretch.
That does make sense.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:If armour cannot keep up with firepower and stealth is a no go, then having an active defence system helps. You could even just use the graser or coilgun system slaved to your suit's sensor suite so that should you find an ATGM popping over the horizon, you don't waste milliseconds thinking about it and you just have the suit target and dispose of the threat like a compact point defence system. It won't work perfectly all the time for all threats, but it should enable greater survivability without excess armour.
Well, I was considering "stealth" capabilities, but they would be tapdancing into handwavium territory again somewhat. From my earlier notes - thermal matching (handwavium), and chameleon-skin.
As for auto-tracking and firing, I do like the idea, but I don't see of a feasible way to do so, since the weapon carried would be a gun, and not a turret on the suit - would you mind elaborating?
Admiral Valdemar wrote:And for a suit like this, I'm thinking over 100 kilos at least. I weigh 65 kg and I'm a lanky bastard. I can't see an all environment exoskeleton weighing less than my work backpack. You'll need extra mass even if you did have such lightweight materials, just to help counter recoil issues.
You do make a good point about the recoil issues - to have a much better chance dealing with the coilgun, a heavier suit would be able to withstand the unholy kick of that thing.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:Additionally, what damage controls does it have? If you lose an arm in hard vacuum, you may notice it even before the shock wears off. Does it constrict the limb and supply analgesics?
This is an excellent point, I hadn't thought much about this one yet. Within the confines of the tech so far, I would say it constricts the limb and supplies a limited supply of certain drugs, yes.
In the case of a limb getting wholly blown off, the edges around the hole would have to be sealed quickly - do you have any suggestions on this count?
Admiral Valdemar wrote:Would this seriously hamper the control systems and are they neural linkages via the cranium, or are they electro-muscular control based?
They have brainwave-reading sensors that respond without need of a true cybernetic linkup once they "learn" the user's thought patterns, and a two manual systems as a backup that the suit uses until the brainwave-reading sensors acclimate to the wearer, and also in case of emergency.