TIE fighters over the first Death Star were still able to see where the X-wings were. Though it is just as likely that they were simply vectored by much more powerful sensors based on the Death Star. If the Empire stopped jamming the Rebel fighters would have almost certainly been able to hit the exhaust port. Though of course that begs the question of why they didn't use optical guidance. I suppose it could have been a speed and acceleration problem given the tight turn we saw the missiles make.Sea Skimmer wrote: Also if they had a ready way of doing things electronically, they'd then also want to constantly engineer new hardware, and deploy ever more elaborate antennas to do so. Not really seeing much (as in we all know its zero) to suggest anything like that is going on. The best ECCM always ends up being hardware is the reality. Electronic methods are a way to exploit your hardware. it seems far more likely that they are stuck in the situation the world was in during the early 1950s when jamming largely just could blank out systems. And since they are using scibabble crap anyway we have no reason to assume they can't get stuck in that kind of situation.
That is a reasonable idea. Effectively a hot mic. I recall that being used in Generation Kill to prevent an incompetent officer from calling in artillery on his own position. Or something to that effect. I might be combining events.Elheru Aran wrote:It's possible that the switch on the speeder bike simply caused some kind of feedback thanks to being in motion during a high speed chase which would have prevented legible messages being broadcast. Not quite 'jamming' in the usual sense, but still effective. But who knows.
The F-16 block 10 and block 60 look largely the same despite the fact that the first version could only drop dumb bombs and fire sidewinders with a simplistic radar. At one point it was a daytime only aircraft with no ability to shoot missiles based on radar contacts. The block 60 has an AESA radar and can carry most any air launched weapon in the US inventory. Appearances mean nothing when it comes to electronic systems.Elheru Aran wrote:As observed previously, it's only around a 5-year period from ANH to ROTJ. Would significant changes in electronic technology really be all that apparent from point A to B on that timeline? WWII ships didn't look *very* different in 1945 versus 1941, after all.
Electronic warfare sure advanced in that time period. It went from a few ground installations to virtually all night fighters having radar. And the ways of countering radar also proliferated with electronic warfare largely being invented. And warships similarly went through a change. While none of the ships sunk at Pearl Harbor had radar, virtually every ship in the US Navy did by 1945. They were even installing it on nearly every PT boat.
Though that has little relevance to Star Wars. Their technology is very nearly static. New technologies are simply different takes on old ideas.
That is assuming that it is possible. If you dump enough energy from jammers, it would just plain interfere with sensors. Having an AI deal with electronic warfare could work, but we never see any indication of it. Jamming just plain works in Star Wars in most major battles that we see. Those who can defeat it seem to have enough power to do so.Simon_Jester wrote:It's credible, but they have immense processing power and it's not credible that they're all too stupid to try and use it.
I'm imagining a scenario where the hardware limitations are profound (Star Wars technology doesn't change rapidly), and the software responses to jamming are as good as anyone can make them- but where jamming IS as you say inherently very effective, so that while droid brains can sometimes counter the jamming, they can't always do so. And for all intents and purposes the merely human operators just give up trying to do anything about enemy ECM themselves; either the droids can cope or they can't. If they can't there's nothing for it except to blow up the jammer.
It's why no one ever considers using jammers against the Trade Federation. Though by the Clone Wars, they had learned from their lesson and turned it into a kill switch rather than a keepalive signal.