tlb wrote:We are told that the wedges slant, so that one opening (the front?) is wider than the other. But how does the wedge know which is which? There has to be something in the powering of the nodes that causes this. So reversing would just be a matter of reversing the slant. The only problem that I can imagine is that the compensator has a preferred direction.
If it did not work because the was nothing to push against, then the wedge would not work at all; because what is there to push when going forward? Fortunately it must push the alpha wall, or something like that.
My suspicion is that its the ultra delicate nano-scale structures within the impeller nodes themselves that "hardcode" the direction of the wedge.
You might be able to build nodes able to reverse the wedge angle; but even if possible they'd probably be much larger devices. But we also know that gravity effect of running a wedge can cause damage to those structures if they aren't powered (or protected by a baffle-like field); so it's also possible that reversible nodes would require different parts of the internal structures to be powered depending on which way the wedge was sloping; and that means generating the wedge might well damage the ability to reverse the wedge (or at the very least dramatically reduce the service life of each node).
So there's probably good reason that the engine builders accept the annoyance of having to flip ship to keep the direction of acceleration constant. And I doubt it's the compensator caring about direction.
But really this is all pretty much barely-informed speculation because RFC hasn't given up enough details to know why wedges don't have a reverse gear.