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Difference between revisions of "Active Sensors/Fire Control"

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'''Active Sensors''' and '''Fire Control''' are designed [[components]]. Active search [[sensors]] are a necessity for any fleet. They are needed to target hostiles, and to detect incoming missiles. Missile Fire Controls can only operate in conjunction with an active search sensor. The active sensor does not have to be on the same ship.
 
'''Active Sensors''' and '''Fire Control''' are designed [[components]]. Active search [[sensors]] are a necessity for any fleet. They are needed to target hostiles, and to detect incoming missiles. Missile Fire Controls can only operate in conjunction with an active search sensor. The active sensor does not have to be on the same ship.
  

Revision as of 12:12, 16 February 2016

Active sensors project window

Active Sensors and Fire Control are designed components. Active search sensors are a necessity for any fleet. They are needed to target hostiles, and to detect incoming missiles. Missile Fire Controls can only operate in conjunction with an active search sensor. The active sensor does not have to be on the same ship.

Description

An Active Sensor is a "radar" component, that gather target data by bouncing gravitational pulses off a target and are necessary to open fire on a target. Components: Active Sensor Strength, EM Sensor Sensitivity, Sensor Size, Minimum Resolution, Hardening.

Active Sensor Strength is the strength per HS of the gravitational pulses sent out by the sensor while EM Sensitivity represents the ability of the sensor to detect the returning pulses. Hardening reduce the chance of destruction by electronic damage from microwave weapons. These can be increased through background research.

Resolution determine the range versus different target sizes. An active sensor is able to detect any ship of a size that is equal to or greater than its resolution at its maximum range. If the target is smaller than the resolution, the maximum detection range is considerably reduced.

Max Sensor Range = Strength x Size x Sqrt(Resolution) x EM Sensitivity/10 x 10,000km
Detection range = Max Sensor Range x (Target Size / Resolution) ^2

So you need to design active sensors based on the role intended for that sensor. An area search sensor might be designed with a large resolution to find large enemy ships while a sensor designed to detect fast attack craft, which are 1000 tons or less would need a resolution of approximately 20. Missile detection sensors are usually resolution one, which is the lowest possible.

Additionally design considerations are discussed in-depth here: Active Sensor Design. Missile Fire Controls are designed like active sensors, but are unable to detect targets and are used to control missiles.

Components

Active Sensor Strength
Strength 10 12 16 21 28 36 48 60 80 100 135 180
RP cost 1,000 2,000 4,000 8,000 15,000 30,000 60,000 120,000 250,000 500,000 1,000,000 2,000,000
EM Sensor Sensitivity
Sensitivity 5 6 8 11 14 18 24 32 40 50 60 75
RP cost 1,000 2,000 4,000 8,000 15,000 30,000 60,000 120,000 250,000 500,000 1,000,000 2,000,000
Total Sensor Size

Total Sensor Size ranges between 0.1-50 HS.

Minimum Resolution

Minimum Resolution ranges between 1-500 HS.

Electronic Hardening
Hardening 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Chance of Destruction (%) 100 70 50 40 30 25 20 15 10
RP cost 1,000 2,500 5,000 10,000 20,000 40,000 75,000 150,000 300,000
Active Sensor Type
Type Search Sensor Missile Fire Control
Range Multiplier 1 3
Use Detection Missile Guidance