martin wrote:It also contains one of the best battle descriptions in the series. Scottie Tremaine v Admiral Tamoguchi. Brilliant!
As long as you pay no attention to that man behind the curtain. Like how does a 20,000 some ton LACs tow 1.5 million tons worth of pods? It's like you in rowboat towing the aircraft carrier USS Nimitz.
The missiles were fired from pods at the same time so you have essentially a 2D grid of missiles whose z axis is pointing at the RMN and are approaching at quite a significant rate. To hit more than one missile you have to pass through the grid multiple times or approach the grid from the x or y axis. Which the Mk23s do not.
So essentially you can possibly kill one missile in each pattern with each Mk23. So with 72 missiles you get to kill 576 incoming missiles if you get one in each pattern. Which is more than a bit questionable due to the crappy sensors in MDMs.
Remember how in the awful book we have this ""They can't be serious," Spiropoulo said in exasperation as every single impeller signature disappeared simultaneously from her plot, six minues after launch."..."They blazed in across the remaining distance, tracking with clean, lethal precision, and their ballistic flight had dropped them off of the Republic's sensors. Chin's ships knew approximately where they were, but not exactly, and their supporting EW platforms and penetration aids came up with their impellers."
Missile sensors suck compared to ship sensors. Missile wedges are also small compared to CM wedges. but they are not tiny and need to be well separated to avoid fratricide (as it has been clearly stated that pre-apollo missiles do not talk to other missiles in the salvo, they need to have enough time (which is distance) to detect and maneuver to avoid other missiles maneuvering. So this will be at least 200% of the diameter of the wedge.
But no, they got 400 plus in each wave with 72 missiles.
So yeah, more the patented war porn that David has come to love.