Somtaaw wrote:Really?
I know warships can still track targets through their wedge while rolled belly to the target, and if you're willing to sacrifice sending your missiles any updates with control links, that would mean you can indeed fire off-bore missiles on a target while on your side, wouldn't it? Obviously your missiles wouldn't be anywhere near peak performance, unless you're shooting at something much smaller than you (or an SLN unit
) but that doesn't mean it's impossible to fire that way.
My understand of the Keyhole platform, is that it permits you to still roll belly to your target, but because the Keyhole's are stationed out much farther than even tractored decoys (and chock full of fire control links), you can still send the updates to your missiles. But it's merely a refinement of something Manticore was capable of doing the moment they managed to design missiles than can be fired off-bore. Capable of, being the key.
Poorly. Fire control links do not appear to be 'aimed' through the top or bottom of the wedge.
From HoS, Saganami-B:
Chase: 2M, 3G, 6CM, 8PD
"The second generation missile launchers are capable of limited off-bore fire into adjacent arcs, though the chase telemetry arrays limit them to realtime control of less than half the total salvo they could launch."
Saganami-C:
Chase: 3L, 2G, 8PD
"The 3rd generation launchers and missile allow them to fire off-bore up to 180 degrees, launching a 40-missile salvo into any firing arc, and telemetry arrays have also been upgraded, allowing full control of up to three “stacked broadsides” in any aspect not blocked by the wedge."
This would indicate that in order to be fully off-bore capable, they need lots and lots of fire control telemetry arrays on all sides of the ship. The Sag-C and Nike probably have no bow/stern missile or countermissile launchers in order to squeeze sufficient fire control to control both broadsides into the hammerheads for chase engagements.
The magic of Keyhole is deceptively simple - its job is to maintain a line of sight to both its mothership and the enemy target or incoming missiles. It's essentially one of those fancy curved cameras special forces use to peek around corners without exposing themselves to direct fire. All the keyhole has to do is point its bow or stern at the mothership and then it can roll to keep its broadside arrays focused upon the target. The mothership's tractors will keep it in formation, though obviously the Keyhole is capable of independent maneuvering to some extent.
Keyhole classification is a mess. As far as I can make out, Keyhole-I was only for anti-missile defense(possibly only fitted on SD(P)s), then Keyhole-II added telemetry relays for missiles.
There are at least two Keyhole-II platforms, a smaller version used for Nike(with six telemetry arrays) and a larger version on the Invictus(with eight arrays). The larger one is Apollo capable, the smaller is not.
Therefore, I'd say making the CL-X's keyholes defensive only is a retrograde step. Perhaps sacrifice the second platform for full capabilities on the first, tucked into the dorsal or ventral side?