kzt wrote:Jonathan_S wrote:
So yes, the fleet flagship is usually one of its capital ships, and thus generally safer than the escorts. But that's more because those ships have the room and communications to support an admiral and the staff necessary to command a full fleet.
This is what made the whole idea that you couldn't fit any marines on a Roland utterly unbelievable. You have the space for the staterooms of the Squadron CO and his staff of officers and senior NCOs, and the briefing rooms, planning spaces, and flag bridge but nowhere that a platoon of marines can sleep?
Yep. It might not be ideal; but as a field expedient you've got the room.
A 'proper' Marine setup would likely include a larger gym, dedicated armory/armorer area for weapons and armor secure storage, maintenance, and repair; squad sized berthing compartments; a firing range large enough for Marine marksman practice (large enough both in length and in number of simultaneous users); larger mess area (possibly separate mess area); etc.
But you can improvise weapons/armor storage (if nothing else the must have shipping crates and you should be able to lock those. It's not ideal, but throw in some kind of rack to hold those and good enough. And while berthing and messing might not be ideal you can always run up some bunks and slap them into the staff quarters; and run them through the mess in shifts.
A proper firing range might be harder to deal with; but as an expedient you can probably cope with your Marines getting a little rusty on their marksmanship. (Or you might be able to arrange frequent enough access to a groundside or on-station range, or even one on a larger or older ship that has a proper Marine country. Heck for armor marksmanship you could probably throw up a temporary one out on the hull <G>)
Still, it was stupid not to build those flag areas as dual use so they'd be easily convertible if you wanted to embark Marines. Why leave a flag area that's just going to be always empty on 90% of your Rolands? Okay during the war, even if they were convertible, probably 88% of the time they'd be carrying neither flag nor leathernecks; but it'd make them more flexible in their later life -- and shouldn't have added much time or cost to their build.