Coole, on 16 February 2013 - 09:29 PM, said:
Yes, additional force. But at top speed, you can't exert additional force. Therefore your top speed, while moving through water, is lower. And subsequently, whatever force you require for any speed under maximum, isn't enough to maintain the same speed when in water. I'm not sure if you're trolling me either.
Not trolling. You just made an extremely ambiguous statement, which I believe you meant to be relative rather than absolute. I'm a physicist, you see, and I get a tad miffed when people make wild, absolute statements and claim "it's just simple physics" on the interwebs. I get so mad, bro.
Though, if you really want to analyze it, a Mech's top speed doesn't necessarily correlate to its maximum power generation. The top speed may simply be a maximum safe velocity, which actually makes some sense when you consider the existence of equipment like MASC.
Re Sarna: "
Myomer Accelerator Signal Circuitry is a piece of equipment that allows a BattleMech to move twice its walking speed. However, actuators were not built for this kind of stress, and prolonged usage of MASC systems can lock up the actuators in a 'Mech, and cause it to be immobilized."
So, you see, the maximum speed of a Mech may not be a measure of how much power its legs can deliver, but rather how much speed (friction) its joints can handle.
A Mech supplying additional power to its legs when moving through denser-than-air matter is quite plausible.
Edited by Vlad Ward, 16 February 2013 - 09:35 PM.