JeffEngel wrote:fallsfromtrees wrote:Of course after you have tractored it to the LAC, since you won't be ablecto get it inside the wedge, you have seriously reduced one of the LAC's major advantages, that of its acceleration, makeing this one of the more brain dead ides I have heard of yet.
You definitely could not tractor even a single pod inside a LAC's wedge? I ask because I have neither data nor even an impression of the scales involved. I'm not about to advocate for doing it, mind you - I just don't have reason yet to be confident that the plan would fail at that stage.
From Baen's FAQ page http://www.baen.com/FAQS.asp
On the electronics front, the new LACs have EW (and especially ECM) capabilities superior to most light cruisers. Coupled with their much smaller impeller signatures, which are already much less readily detectable than a DD's, that makes them far more stealthy than any other warship yet built. A SHRIKE mounts 3 tractors, which means it can tow up to 3 missile pods, but only with severe degradation of its acceleration curve. A SHRIKE with a single pod suffers a 20% reduction in accel; one with 2 pods suffers a 50% reduction; and one with 3 pods suffers an 80% reduction (max military power accel of only 127.2 gees). In addition, even a single pod on tow requires drive power levels which make stealth very difficult even with all the EW built into the new class.
This quote was discussing the original Shrike, but the mass is about the same, even if they got significantly more accel.
We don't know the dimensions of a current pod, but simple math dictates that it masses somewhere between 2000 and 5000 tons (the mass has probably been trending down as technology improves.) Meanwhile a RMS LAC masses in the 20 KTons range - making a single Pod mass between 10 and 25 % of a LAC mass - A Roland can tow 15 Pods with it's 188 Kton mass, or between 16% and 40% of it's mass. Using that same ratio, a LAC shouldn't tow more than 1.5 pods.