Which thing in particular do you have a problem with?
I assumed it would be easy to spot stuff at our solar system, a thing I assumed because all those guys complaining about stealth in soft scifi space battles.
Cloaking devices are sorta BS, but that misses the point that it's actually much harder to spot ships at a distance in space than sci-fi would lead you to believe. Basically, you don't need a cloaking device, you just need a non-reflective hull and to not emit too much EM radiation.
In other words, if you want to stealth in space, you're going to roast yourselves to death. You've gotta get rid of the excess heat to keep your life-support supporting you, and that's going to stand out like a beacon against the 3 Kelvin background (Example: using the surface of the craft to maximize surface area without building radiators (something like the Shuttle did), something the size of, shall we say, an Oscar-class submarine (a good ballpark estimate for a small combat spacecraft), looking at it from an angle. Nose-on surface area's 250m
2, broadside's 2770m
2, so call it 1510m
2 facing what's looking for you. What's say you know you're being looked for and don't mind irritating your crew a bit and have life support set to 275 Kelvin (a bit above freezing). You can still be seen from a little over 2 light-minutes away (Math: R
d = 13.4 * sqrt(A) * T
2, where R
d is the range at which you can be seen in kilometers, A is exposed surface area in m
2, and T is surface temperature in Kelvin)).
-snip-
Yeah, it seems to work, but not very well.
Kinda like a photon drive. Yeah, they work, but you have to put ungodly amounts of power in them to do anything worthwhile.