The Duchess of Zeon wrote:Part of it is just an engineering issue, Stas.
That is understandable, but it's not like I'm saying that we already have an arsenal of doom or something. We are building it, and we're just at the very start of production. Making 1000 detonation-capable deuterium pellets is not what I'd call "armed and ready".
The Duchess of Zeon wrote:I don't see anything in principle to rule out the process, but I'd still have serious reservations about any kind of weaponization taking place within a short period of time.
It would take years if not decades to build a large arsenal of pellets and expendable lasers. The cost of the first warheads would be very expensive due to the fact that the high-power, expensive-capacitor lasers would have to be built as expendable items. Serial production of pellets is only the beginning, like I noted in the post.
The Duchess of Zeon wrote:This is all about developing industrial processes to mass produce the necessary equipment... hardened to handle considerable amounts of force, acceleration, etc.
Exactly, hence why we only introduced the pellets and test-detonations, but no actual warheads. There should be a commercial international demand for these weapons before we actually start mass producing FGNWs. And this is the goal of our Generals' commercial pitch.
Note that this is around 2018-2019, and the only thing he is talking about is the industrial pellet production line, not a whole host of already weaponized items like missile warheads, laser ignitors, etc. This is all for years to come. In any case I'm glad that upon consideration, our idea wasn't brushed off as a principal infeasibility.
We're thinking about a viable
small arsenal of more or less compact deuterium-based FGNWs by, say, 2030 but no earlier (it's hard to produce the stuff!). Less compact weapons (I'm not going to spoil people here) may be deployed before that, say, in the 2020-2025 period, but these would be more like mines (land and sea), which would not have to endure acceleration stress on laser components, etc.
So I'm not saying we already set up the entire industrial complex for these weapons, exactly the contrary - we've called all CATO nations to invest in this yet-to-be complex, invest in construction and maintenance of production lines for weaponization of both ignitors and pellets. This is years from now. I went with the effects that the document about fourth-generation nuclear weapons implied (subkiloton compact weapons for intermediate sized arms...) and just phrased them in a commerical pitch.
That is a lot more careful than claims of "wideband stealth NOW" and "compact fusion reactors NOW" which the MESS already employed. Once again thanks for the input, when considering the actual design of those weapons, we'll take everything discussed here into consideration and limit their spread to realistic options only, as well as realistic terms of construction.