cthia wrote:cthia wrote:Honor also fired at around 150M kilometers, iinm.
Theemile wrote:That was her demonstration launch of 64 missiles in AAC against Tourville. It was an Apollo launch, with massive ballistic segments, using system repeater Hermes Buoys. It was a 1 time launch which realy cannot be repeated, nor could she actually attack with larger salvos given the lashup.
Normally, Apollo range ends ~100 MKM or so - we have never been told a from number, only it is more than 90 MKM (a distance Mike was simulating in SFTS) and significantly less than the 150 MKM of the Tourville launch.
Why was it a one time launch? It can be repeated at any time in the Home System, right? The Home System will always have Hermes. Or any other system given Hermes.
BTW, wasn't there mention in SoV, by Hamish, to offer Hermes to other systems? The offer was used a carrot. Which I find shocking.
That is Mycroft - the new generation system defensive network. It's Apollo married with the Havenite Mycroft system on Steriods, Speed, Coke, and Jet awake pills all rolled up into one.
Where we are at currently in the storyline, October 1922pd, Mycroft is still being deployed in the first few systems, so it, and it's capabilities have not been seen, and are still theorized. Most importantly, required hundreds, if not thousands of sensor drones and repeater stations to control the Apollo missiles, and it definitely is not a shipborne system.
What Honor did with her fleet couldn't be replicated under other conditions. Only in Manticore space in 1921 pd was she able to find the emplaced buoys to control just 64 missiles out to 150MKM. It's not like she could take it with her to another system, so it is not indicative of what Apollo can do. (If she was in Apollo range, she could have controlled 100x that salvo size from 1 ship alone)
So me saying this is a 1 time shot, was like a sniper sitting in a perfect sniper nest; up high over the target, no obstructions, no one shooting at him, a nice steady breeze in the right direction, perfect temps, visible wind markers, a still target, and plenty of time to take his shot. It's one of those situations where everything has to work the just right way, and you cannot expect to enjoy again.