Illuminatus Primus wrote:To totally break it up. Why did the Empire make a Death Star when it could BDZ (beyond shielded worlds, that is).
Maybe because (if you did the math for the System bombard force) you'd note it would require some TWELVE torpedo spheres. (2 Spheres per Torpedo line, two lines per squadron, 3 squadrons per system Force = 12.) And they only have SIX torpedo spheres so far, if they even bother to make any more.
EDIT: Additionally, consider the concentration of forces required to accomplish a System Bombard. It can take time and coordination to assemble those scattered forces. A Death Star is a much more simplified platform (you have everything required in a single, impregnable shell)
I figure that once t he Executor class ( or maybe just the 8/12.8 km "Super Star Destroyer" that gets mistaken as an Executor-class) was in production, they stopped making Torpedo spheres because the Executors were already a comparable vessel. This suggests that its probable a System Bombard employs Movie Executor class or EU Super Star Destroyers (8/12.8 km) rather than the Torpedo Spheres. So the firepower output probably applies more to Executor classes than to any other ship (since most of the rest o fthe ships in the System Bombard are corvette/Frigate/light cruiser classes - IE Escorts.)
To back this up:
The Imperial Sourcebook wrote:
Housed within the shell of a Torpedo Sphere, the two-wave gravshock - or planetbuster - is designed to do terrible damage on a near-planetary scale.
By localizing a planet’s gravity, the gravshock waves can simulate earthquakes, floods, and other natural disasters. Unfortunately, time and power make this weapon somewhat impractical on the everyday scale. The Super-class Star Destroyer, for example, is the only ship with engines powerful enough to pump the massive amounts of energy necessary for a full planetary disruption, but it has no need of such a weapon considering the armaments it packs.
The localization effect of the gravwave is not without problems either. As a planet’s gravitational field is altered, any vessels navigating in near-space (including the attacker) are subject to rapid and unpredictable orbital shifts.
However, successful tests make this ordnance worth exploring. Crushing cities in upon themselves, shaking them to pieces, redirecting waterways to make the most of their destructive power, the gravshock device is worthy of Imperial thinking and use.
One new concept for the gravshock technology involves asteroid mining and surveying. Imperial engineers theorize that by studying the effects of a weak gravwave attack on a small body, like a moon or asteroid, they can learn information about its interior. Thus, the weapon can be used to find important ores and metals for making even more weapons.
Also consider that in Before the Storm, 3 Executor/Super class and around two-score or more ISDs and VSDs were considered enough firepower to overwhelm a planetary defense (including shields) - which included Coruscant I believe.
The comparison of the Executor class to the Torpedo sphere can also explain how the Lusankya escaped Coruscant in the Krytos trap - Isard would know of (or have been able to create) weaknesses in the Corucant planetary shield that she could direct fire against in order to create an escape window.