Weird Harold wrote:You still are going to run into control issues -- as noted earlier, RMN ships can put more CM's into space than they can control and without that hypothetical FTL control node, your idea just pushes CMs beyond the range of shipboard control links.
That still leaves turning control over to a LAC in a forward position, but wouldn't it be better to give the LAC complete control over the CMs it controls, including when to launch them?
To be fair LACs do have a problem with endurance in the missile defense role. They can't carry enough onboard CMs for a full SD(P) engagement.
If you could wave a magic wand and make super long range CMs that don't have negative size or cost impacts I could see where you'd want the ability to "blind-fire" CMs from your wall for the forward deployd LAC screen take over and control. That'd give you the deep anti-missile magazines of your wallers but the defensive depth of the forward LAC screen.
Unfortunately such a magic no-tradeoffs CM doesn't seem to be on the horizon. I guess the new better defended CLACs RFC has talked about are one attempt at an alternate solution; by keeping them with the wall they potentially allow the LAC screen to cycle back and reload on CMs. You couldn't have all your LACs engaged at once - but you'd have
some LAC CM cover for a much longer period.
My personal "hobby horse" is a CM that's FTL receive-only. I
suspect that an FTL receiver (capable of picking up fire control data over no more than say 7 million km) would be a heck of a lot smaller than the FTL receiver and transmitter built into the Apollo Control missile. Possibly even small enough to cram into a new CM design - and cutting the control lag in half is nothing to sneeze at. Combine that with pulling sensor data from FTL equipped drones
(already part of Mantie missile defense doctrine) you should be, effectively, better than even that.
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Of course this same though could potentially to applied to make a more deadly DDM; but I suspect there's reason we've only seen FTL fire control mounted on platforms that can hold clear of the ship's wedge. Which, since nothing smaller than an SD(P) carries a keyhole II means FTL receivers for missiles smaller than they use are (at this point) a waste)