Weird Harold wrote:munroburton wrote:I doubt a frigate could carry enough spare bodies to capture ten prizes per cruise - more like only two or three. It's the Marine capacity that really makes the difference between a frigate and a light cruiser from a piratical viewpoint.
If space for hostages and prize crew is your primary concern, then an Atlas-class passenger liner is your ideal pirate ship:
Enough arms to take out an unsuspecting convoy escort, enough defenses to survive a suspicious convoy escort, and space/life support for about a SLN SD's worth of extra people.
An armed merchant ship like Pirate's Bane and Ambuscade (or purpose built q-ship like PRN Sirius) provides the same sorts of advantages without the overkill and maintenance requirements of a dedicated Warship. They also provide the ability to masquerade as a legitimate cargo carrier to gather information or fill in the gaps when the pirate business is slow.
A Pirate ships needs to be able to hide-in-plain-sight without raising suspicions about a privately owned warship. All of the advocates of warships are arguing for a Privateer or commerce raiding Rebel "Navy" more than they're arguing for an ideal pirate ship.
From an Economic side, the Atlas class is a mistake - it had a crew the size of a CA and cost a fortune to run - it only made money when it was nearly full of wealthy passengers. There was a reason Hauptman built only 2 of them - their mil spec parts made them expensive to keep up. Remember mil spec means military levels (and costs) of maintenance. I wouldn't say an Atlas costs as much to run as a BC, but surely as much as a CA if not more.
Even the Pirate's Bane and Ambuscade were expensive to run - Bachfitch charged a premium to haul cargo and probably needed that premium to cover the larger crew and maintenance costs - being armed as he was, he couldn't afford to charge normal rates. With Silensia becoming a safer place, I would bet he may be forced to close up shop or move on to more dangerous pastures.