Jonathan_S wrote:I doubt the outsized docking ring and munitions handling equipment take up a dozen or more meters on the inboard end of the bay. There's only a max off 44 meters between the noses of LAC docked in opposite broadsides and some of that room is needed for CLAC ship systems and passageways. [Beam of a Hydra-class CLAC 188 meters, length of a pair of LACs 144 meters]
And frankly the issue with dispatch boats is buying and manning enough in the first place. If you've got them there's no need to stick them inside a CLAC as they're more than capable of tagging along with any fleet they've been assigned to. At most you might need to transfer them some fuel from time to time.
Perhaps this sort of thing would be limited to Havenite carriers, which are SD sized and have a bit more beam to play with. Or would just be entirely impractical on that basis.
It's probably just head-canon for me at this point, but I'm looking at the dimensions of LACs and assuming the inside of the pressure hulls look a lot like a WW2 submarine in terms of living space (albeit with a crew of 10 instead of 70). Most of the hull volume is filled with weapons, drive systems, power plant, and life support, with living space for the crew at a bare minimum. Dispatch boats can't have much more free space and have larger crews (20ish?). I guess the frame of reference I'm looking at it from is long-term crew quality of life for an "emergency" dispatch boat assigned to, say, a terminus picket somewhere in Solarian space.
The arrangement for the long term DB at Hades is what leads me to believe living 6 months at a time on one of these boats is not conducive to crew morale. Tolerable if they're constantly in motion but bad if they're just sitting on standby. Basically the equivalent of requiring a submarine crew to live on board even when the boat is tied up along shore between deployments. Being able to get out of the tin can - even if it is only onto a larger tin can - would be a positive thing for the crew.