Jonathan_S wrote:JDredd wrote:While thinking about HH ships while rereading the series it occurred to me that we are missing an obvious shiptype, an anti missile podnaught ! I know all about LAC's being quickly and easily built but they take a lot of manpower for each ship.
An AM(p) (I know had to call it something) would have the manpower requirements of a BC(P) or less, probably a lot less. I was thinking of the cannisters that Haven threw out of main missile tubes in one of the earlier books, forget which one, and it occurred to me that they could use those cannisters or something bigger with more missiles (Mk31's +) in and just drop loads of pods around their fleet. They could be pushed further out when defending an area and if they built the hulls on something small and fast could still be used in fleet actions, they drop their pods and leggit
Just a thought
To date David Weber has been against pods for CM missiles. However it is possible that events at Galton might cause him to have the RMN change their minds about that.
Still, with the exception of the CLAC (and maybe the Roland) he's had the RMN committed to keeping their warships multi-purpose; so there really aren't any dedicated anti-missile escorts. Turning an entire BC sized vessel into one would be a major deviation from their established policy. (Which doesn't necessarily means it's a horrible idea -- though you'd want to make sure it wasn't ever detached for independent duty. I guess you'd basically change the composition of SD(P) squadrons to add one or two of your AM(P)s as permanent parts of the squadron)
Perhaps the time simply wasn't ripe for RMN use. Especially considering all of their other breakthroughs. And would those CM pods need control links and FTL?
It makes sense that the MA adopted them to counter the insane number of missiles the GA tend to toss around. Necessity is the mother of invention.