kzt wrote:Potato wrote:Blown up when used against significantly heavier and numerous opposition. When used as for operations they were designed for, they were fine.
No matter how clever your plans are, the enemy gets a vote. You don't get to choose what forces the enemy deploys against you. If your plan is you will always have the foresight to bring the exquisitely correct force to have enough firepower to defeat exactly the force you predict will be there without 'wasting' your forces by bringing too much force then I predict a lot of sadness in your future.
If you are attempting an economy of force operation and expect a force that you can easily defeat with BCs armed with cruiser grade missiles then perhaps should bring BCs armed with cruiser grade missiles and keep the heavier ships for missions that need heavier ships. If, on the other hand, you expect that you will quite possibly encounter forces that a force of BCs can't defeat and hence feel you need to include heavier ships to deal with a threat that can't be handled by cruiser grade missiles then it makes sense to arm everyone with weapons that are effective against the predicted threat when you have those weapons on hand.
The Mk-16s have
not failed against SDs because of range constraints. There has never been a battle in the Honorverse in which the Manties were unable to engage because their Mk-16s couldn't reach the enemy. They may require longer flight times, and coordinating them with the Mark-23 may require some fancy footwork, but lack of range has
never been a decisive factor. Now, the fact that the BC(P)s in question are getting smacked with capital missiles when they were never designed or armored to stand up to that sort of fire, is another matter entirely.
I know you are committed to the theory that outfitting BC(P)s with Mk-16s is lunacy. I think you are decidedly wrong about that, and I think that combat results in the Honorverse to date certainly do not support your contention that the Mk-16 is
tactically and effectively grossly inferior to the Mk-23 when it comes to performing the tasks it's been called upon to perform. Yes, it has a lower throw weight and less laser rods; no, the Manties have yet to find anything they can't kill with it. And in most cases, cruiser-level opposition was precisely what the BC(P)s were sent along to deal with as a component of a force which couldn't be all wallers
because the RMN didn't have enough of them. So the BCs are sent along to deal with the lighter elements while the wallers deal with the wallers. Doesn't always work out that way, but you have to make your force allocations out of what's available to you. And the Mk-16 has proved a handful even for Haenite wallers; it's been completely lethal to
any Solly who was so far encountered it.
I realize I'm only the author here and that my grasp of my own combat paradigm
could be flawed
, but I genuinely do not recall a single instance in which arming the BC(P)s with Mk-23s would materially have effected the outcome of the battle. The RMN prefers sustaintability (and yes, yes, I
know that BC(P)s in pod-era combat are way too fragile; so does the RMN, thus the
Nike), but they are just as satisfied with the Mk-16 as the USN would have been satisfied with a passel of
Alaskas with 12" batteries.
On the
Courvosier internal tubes, they were designed to fire the original capacitor-fed MDMs. They cannot fire the Mk-23 for the same reason that the Mark-16 can't be fired from a "conventional" tube; the missile fusion plants are spun up in the tubes immediately before launch, which requires entirely different arrangements for handling and power supply. There's no
size isuue; it's a "plumbing" issue, and an improved MDM with enhanced endurance drives is certainly a possibility.
On the other hand, the
Courvosiers' tubes are a modular installation. The entire tube and all of its ancillary equipment can be removed --- along with a solid plug of the external armor in which the mount is "embedded" --- and replaced with a new module the same size which
could be capable of firing at least the standard Mk-23 attack missile; the Echoes would be a lot harder to squeeze in, and that refit might not, in fact, be possible.