tlb wrote:penny wrote:I probably should not have mentioned the idea of a freighter without going into detail. The idea of a freighter is simply mentioned in passing. My logic is that the RMN can build a freighter and give it military nodes and compensation. I do not know if the notion is viable, but I am thinking that a militarized freighter might be able to keep up with the fleet whose accel is also limited by the pods the fleet is towing; at the beginning of engagements. Probably not a good idea. It was more off the cuff.
Those freighters already exist and they do not limit the speed of the fleet. However while they may have PDLCs, I doubt that any can fire missiles (I am not even sure about a PDLC). You can find mention of them in the books on every side in the wars.
The reason Honor beat the first load of escapees from Hades to safety, is that her group had the faster transports.
Ah the JNMTC freighters
In Enemy Hands wrote:Smaller ships in the four- to five-million-ton range couldn't carry as much cargo or as many personnel, but smaller size translated into a larger total number of hulls for the same cumulative tonnage, and that equated to more destinations which could be served simultaneously. In peacetime, operating costs would have doomed the proposal (after all, a four million-ton ship required the same crew and very nearly the same fuel and maintenance costs as an eight million-ton vessel), but faced with the war against the Peeps, military, rather than financial, efficiency had become the overriding priority.
The Joint Navy Military Transport Command, composed of midsized ships and normally assigned to the delivery of high-priority, time-critical cargoes (or delivery to potential combat hot spots), was the result. And as part of the same move to speed and streamline the transportation process, the ships designated for JNMTC use had been taken in hand by navy shipyards—Manticoran or Grayson, as available slips permitted—for overhaul. Time was too tight for their civilian grade inertial compensators and impellers to be altered, but they'd received light sidewalls and missile defense systems, upgraded sensors and rudimentary electronic warfare systems, and military hyper generators to permit them to reach as high as the eta bands. Since most merchantmen were designed to cruise no higher than the delta bands, their up-rated generators virtually doubled the sustained apparent velocity JNMTC ships could attain.
Those have only slightly better acceleration than the big 8-9 mton freighters -- none of them are keeping up with a combat formation. And the Eta bands are still a solid 15% slower than the Theta bands that those combat formation are likely to use -- so the JNMTC freighters can't keep up strategically either.
And their primary purpose is logistical flexibility; but yes they do have very limited defenses tacked on as a wartime expedient; which does make them a bit more survivable against a raider. But note that they do NOT mention any offensive armament or offensive fire control. So they can't shoot back; just try to defense themselves from very small numbers of missiles.
Though I'd bet on them having PDLCs before CMs. PDLCs, while you have to run a power line, appear to require little to no hull penetration other than for power and data. CMs you'd need a launch tube (which is going to be a much larger installation and one that has to be within the hull) plus some kind of magazine. And if they did go with CMs I'd suspect that, to minimize the impact on cargo capacity and make for a quicker conversion, that they'd just have a small local magazine, with a handful of rounds, at each launcher. Maybe, at most, a slightly larger magazine, still right out by the hull, feeding a few closely clustered CM tubes.
Doing it that way means you don't need to make space for a central magazine, and more importantly don't need to find space for, and then install, missile transfer tubes all throughout the ship between the magazine and each launcher. The tradeoff thought would be the low number of CMs and the inability to transfer them between tubes (say if one set runs out while the tubes on the other side of the ship haven't been used yet)