Sigs wrote:Somtaaw wrote:This means, any fleet trains that were present, stay in hyper until sent for, especially on attacks where the attacker isn't quite sure they'll win.
Was that a thing in 1905 or was it a thing after the start of the Second war? I am not entirely sure either way but I am leaning that the staying in hyper was developed after Second Battle of Marsh when Haven started copying the RMN's tactics in that Battle.
That only seemed to have started by the second war, with podnoughts on both sides. The only mention of fleet train prior to the surprise strike opener of the Second War, was McQueen scaring up additional fleet train for Giscard & Tourville post-Icarus. There were later mentions of more fleet train, when Saint-Just and Pierre overrode her and told her to accelerate her operational tempo (mention of Giscard/Tourville needing to be able to handle more cripples in-site rather than turning over to yards and related content).
But the Fleet Train are very notable as 'not' being there, so the "stay in hyper" trick, seems to have always been applied to the train (for offensive operations), and/or in a secured forward system for after you've retreated.
Eighth Fleet during Buttercup seems to have operated in both modus operandi, with forward systems being fortified and supplied with pods and hospital ships, which is what Terekhov was captured trying to protect. But they also possibly operated in the forward method, when it was the ballistic LAC strikes we saw Scotty Tremaine lead (after Eighth Fleet wiped out Barnett).
Haven seemed to have only operated in forward, secure system manner for their Twelfth Fleet, and then started adopting more Manticoran tactics, after returning to being the Republic and exchanging to podnoughts as First & Second Fleets.
And actually, to amend my original observation, we have two instances of some form of fleet train accompanying the warships across the hyperwall. First, the one I mentioned Protector's Own arriving in Marsh and then playing "guess who?" with Honor's staffers. This being prior to the Second Battle of Marsh, with the Thunderbolt surprise attack, is unlikely to be standard doctrine just yet.
Second instance, was Terekhov in Monica, the ammunition ship (Volcano wasnt it?) accompanied the cruisers into normal space, dropped off a bunch of pods, and then stayed outside the hyper limit without actually popping back into hyper.