munroburton wrote:Those are not the more primitive Cataphracts we've seen in previous books. They were probably extra-large system defense variants with ten or twelve lasing rods each. Certainly, not every missile which manages to fire its payload achieves hits. Only 10%, 20% or whatever of those 10,000 lasers ignored the decoys, the EW, etc. and broke through the sidewalls without being bent into the wedge.
We know that Galton had better warheads than the SLN ever had. This was explicit in the text. But it boggles the mind that even an improved Cataphract-C could do that much damage against a latest-generation Invictus, Adler or Sovereign of Space. I don't think the Apollo-generation Mk23 warheads can do that.
Unless those were a previously-unknown Cataphract-D system-defence variant that was even larger than the Cs that the SLN fired from pods. But we're told that the best that Galton had to offer -- especially the graserheads -- had already been fired and used up by this point.
Jonathan_S' post a page back does a much better job of explaining why Grand Fleet's systems weren't quite on top form in this particular situation than I ever could.
Jonathan_S wrote:What I can't remember from TIEF, is whether or not that posthumous surprise launch had any fire control support, or if it was totally blind-fired like the one at Hypatia. Any fire control support would have made it massively more effective.
Massively more effective than an uncoordinated launch, sure. So yes, massively more effective than Hypatia.
The problem is that even a coordinated and controlled launch shouldn't have been enough to do that much damage.
I've already stated that I think this final strike was basically aimed at HMS Imperator, a last-ditch attempt to kill our eponymous heroine. Basic fire control may have been supplied by all "Those orbital habitats, those industrial platforms and shipyards [which] had just made themselves legitimate targets". It just wasn't good enough and most of their last missiles reacquired other Invictuses, because they looked like HMS Imperator, with the other 11 non-wallers simply being unlucky.
How would they know which of the 50-100 Invictus/Harrington II in the fleet was Imperator? Light-speed transmissions never came from Honor's ship, she only used FTL. Any of the other top RMN admirals would also be in a similar ship in a similar squadron, so there should be at least a dozen identical setups, and this is assuming a GSN formation could be told apart from an RMN one.
I'm sure they would have wanted to attack Imperator. I just don't think it believable that they had any idea which ship that was and in which squadron. At best, they'd have selected any of a number of squadrons for pretty much an arbitrary reason. Then if 10% of the missiles that weren't intercepted lost track and fired on any Invictus they could find, there's a 40% chance that one shot was at Imperator.
And it's fortunate for Galton that they failed. Consider the implications if they had managed to kill HMS Imperator: Honor wouldn't have been around to give her restrained response. Someone else, suddenly thrust into command, might have blown those habitats away.
That is true.
Theemile wrote:I can understand the BCs - the IAN and the RHN never built Keyhole BCs and fewer than 150 Agamemnons, Couvosier II, and Nikes were built, so many escorts which could not roll their wedge would be vulnerable. But CLACS should either be kept back with the support craft or screened by the fleet, depending on their defenses. So losing 4 Minotaur/Hydras just feels like a rookie mistake, that Honor would not make.
munroburton wrote:It's a tough call. What if some surprise force dropped out of hyper and the LACs she took in-system ran out of countermissiles? Tactical reloads, plus the carriers' own defensive contributions, could be sorely missed.
They didn't have to be all the way back to the hyperlimit. They just had to be back in the formation, further away from the front facing the Galton remnants. But that's also not a good idea because you can't screen them properly if they're hanging out back. Honor didn't feel the need to do anything different than what had worked for the past full week: she'd successfully defended her CLACs and fleet train against dozens of attacks. After all, she parked a full light-minute away, so any possible attack would take at least 200 seconds to arrive, assuming the enemy had true MDMs as capable as a GA one.