While At All Costs primarily talked about the CM control links of the Mark 20 "Keyhole" platform - because the ships were trying to weather massive system defense pod swarms, so offensive fire control wasn't plot relivant at the time .munroburton wrote: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?
However a few of D'Orville's older (non Apollo capable) Home Fleet ships had Keyhole and part of her plan for the Battle of Manticore included "And set up your firing sequences to have the older ships deploy their pods first. We'll try to hold the internal pods as long as we can. I want the Keyhole ships to manage as many of the other units' pods as possible in the opening salvos." - which does confirm what I believe David said elsewhere, that the original Keyhole platforms had full offensive and defensive fire control links.
As for the CL-X, I agree that stripping the offensive fire control from it's keyholes is a significant reduction in capability. But if a 2.5 mton Nike class had to give up so much to mount a pair of full Keyhole's there's no way you'd squeeze even one into a < 0.5 mton ship - something has to go. (And of course RFC did talk about the possibility of a defensive only keyhole-lite platform; which is where I got the idea)
Still it's possible that even for that you have to give up too much to be worth it, and that you'd be better off with a Roland-style CL rather than a stripped down Sag-C. (OTOH if you went with Sag-C inspired I couldn't see the justification for calling it a CL unless something to a chunk of it's firepower away; otherwise it's just another CA)
And for Skimper's post that slipping in while I was writing this, I've only time now to note that a for similar missile densities a defensive only Keyhole is going to be noticably smaller than an offensive only one; because CM control links are smaller (being shorter ranged).