I think that's kind of unfair. I mean, he did lack experience and training, but I don't see a clear screw up.munroburton wrote:"Bill Woods"]"munroburton"] I wouldn't call Harrington in Honor of the Queen super-brilliant. She screwed up at least twice tactically - the first time against that LAC which got an attack run in and the second, when she broke off the engagement with Saladin.
It wasn't just Sword Simonds' panic that let the Masadans down either - their tac department was running canned EW programs, which let Cardones land a few contact nukes.
Similarly in the Battle of Monica, after another bunch of neobarbs(significantly less technophobic than the Masadans too) were given ex-SLN battlecruisers. One of their engineers screwed up and let a fusion reactor blow up because of patronage/inexperience/insufficient training/being thrown into action earlier than expected.
In hindsight, calling the captain was a waste of time, but unless there's a Big Red Button he should have pushed, I don't think you can say he wasn't just overwhelmed by the circumstances. 'Golden BBs' do happen.[/quote]Yet this time, he was painfully aware of his shortcomings. In the last two weeks he'd begun finding his way around, well enough, at least, that he was pretty sure his ratings and petty officers were no longer laughing behind his back. And he had to admit the Technodyne technicians were right; Typhoon's power rooms really were laid out better, with controls that were easier to use. They just weren't the controls Tyler had spent three and a half T-years learning like the back of his own hand aboard the cruiser Star Fury.
As he listened to the alarms howl, he hoped the damage control parties had learned their equipment better than he'd learned his.
...
Power surges cascaded through her systems, starting in Impeller One and Laser Three. Automatic circuit breakers stopped most of them, but three of the breakers themselves had been knocked out. Rampant energy surged past them, and a broadside graser's superconductor ring blew, shattering internal bulkheads and adding its own massive power to the surge.
The surge that came roaring down the graser's main feed trunk and straight into Power One.
The untamed torrent of energy thundered into the compartment, and an already nervous petty officer leapt back as his control panel blew up. He fell to the decksole on the seat of his pants as electrical fires danced through the control runs, and an alarm began to scream.
...
"Captain, this is Tyler, in Power One!" the young voice in Captain Schroeder's earbug was raw with terror. "We're losing containment on Fusion One!"
"Shut it down!"
"Sir, I'm trying, but—"
Fair enough - perhaps overly harsh on the guy and battlecruisers don't put their fusion rooms near enough to the hull for an ejection - no big red buttons, then.
But there's nothing to say that an experienced, fully trained and drilled engineer couldn't have done something about it either.
And that's part of the whole problem. Those ships have none of the improved armour(internal and external), sidewall generators(for the front and rear), enhanced PDLCs/CMs, not were they designed with the benefit of 10 years of picking through battle damage.
Just because human wave attacks are possible, doesn't mean they should be made.[/quote]
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Just a comment --
The "OpForce" examples given in this recent discussion, (1) Masadans operating a Havenite Sultan Class that was clearly beyond their "then current" abilities
(2) Silecian Pirates operating Solaran Gladiator Class CA's
(3) Monican and Solaran contractors operating Solaran BC's
All are examples of being able to "operate" the ship -- essentially, having read the manuals and knowing which button to push or which valve to open.
That is a LONG way from a trained, experienced crew operating their ship.
Once upon a time (Sea Story -- this is no $*it) there was an anonymous 8-reactor aircraft carrier that, during the VietNam conflict was regularly able to launch 4 aircraft every minute (45 second cycle time on the catapults) and the engineering watchstanding crews would try (and frequently succeed) in beating the equipment casualty drill. (anyone wish to discuss a Loss of Feed off-line ?)
RFC does not get into engineering details (not his displayed forte), but he DOES understand the British training adage "Train like its bloodless battle, and Battle will be like bloody training"
We've seen throughout the series that the better trained crew usually survives. Despite mass and numerical advantages, the Tiberian, Monican and Masadan crews ended up at a disadvantage.
-- Stewart