Jonathan_S wrote:cthia wrote:From the location of the missile launchers, courtesy of MaxxQ, that doesn't seem plausible. The much larger Honorverse missiles have to clear the much larger external dimensions of Honorverse ships before reversing direction -- at least in consideration of reversing direction.
Also, my post was a bit unclear err inaccurate. There is a difference in net acceleration per unit time of the two broadsides. The off-bore launch has a negative acceleration of one vector component, which is momentarily, quite possibly, opposite the target.
In that worst case, 180° off bore, as Weird Harold said the facing launchers would most likely use delayed start to synchronize the salvos.
The worst case missile that might be used for this backwards firing attack would be a single drive extended range missile (ERM/LERM). The common ones of those have a 75/225 second burn (though I think the RMN's is better, but we'll got with the 225 at half power for the calculation).
1 second of burn away gets the missile out to 230 km away from the enemy, more than enough to clear the wedge. Another 0.75 seconds burning vertically will add 129 km of elevation, coming above (or below) the wedge. By this point the missile has moved 575 km away from the enemy. It'll take 2.871 seconds accelerating back towards the target to make up that distance.
But call it a total of 6 seconds lost, to allow for turning times and killing the vertical vector. The missile will have a net velocity of 861 kps towards the enemy when it passes the launching ship, and the remaining 219 seconds on its drive will let it reach 11,219,515 km, with 101,601 kps terminal velocity.
That little U-turn cost it 3.6% of its range and 1.8% of its terminal velocity. [11,219,515 km @ 101,601 kps vs 11,643,750 km @ 103,500 kps]. The missiles launched directly towards the enemy would need to delay spinning up their drives about 4.2 seconds in order to synchronize the 2 halves of the salvo.
The longer the missile's powered endurance the lower, proportional, the impact of 6 second U-turn would be. However even in this worst case scenario it seems well worth paying a few percent reduction in range to double the size of a salvo. (And, if you wanted less impact, you could point your nose or tail at the target so both broadsides need just a 90° turn)
I believe we've been told that EDMs (with 2nd gen offbore tech) can only be f1red ~135 degrees offbore. This is sufficient to cover the adjacent firing arcs, but not the opposite arcs. MDMs and DDM, with 3rd gen offbore, can fire 180 degrees offbore so can cover the opposite firing arc.
I think the capability is all in the engine burn times, with EDMs having the extra power to overcome their initial vector and reorient onto target, and MDMs having power to spare.