runsforcelery wrote:
oh, I don't know: scouting, coastal patrols, carrying dispatches, picketing major enemy ports, acting as signal relays for the main fleet . . . little things like that.
By the height of the Napoleonic Wars, the Royal Navy had expanded to over 600 ships, only 175 of which were ships-of-the-line, and that represented a drop of around 20% of its peak line-of-battle strength. In effect, the RN had effectively defeated the French battle fleet — rather the position Charis is in right now vis-à-vis the Church — but had been forced into an enormous expansion of lighter vessels because of all the hundreds of things navies do beyond simply fighting battles.
Taking the ratio between British ships-of-the-line (the equivalent of the Charisians' "galleons") and their lighter units, you get a ratio of roughly 2.5 frigates, brigs, sloops, et cetera to every ship-of-the-line. In the Imperial Charisian Navy, effectively all of those functions "below the line" are carried out by schooners, and at the moment the Charisians have multiple hundreds of them in service.
Trust me, they been finding things to keep themselves busy doing, but if it turns into a matter of providing convoy escorts against a serious threat to the Empire, they're available for that, too.
Hi RFC,
I'll take your word for it. We'll just have to wait and see how Rock Point deals with the worries he expresses in the snippet. I await that with pleasure.
Don