Galactic Sapper wrote:A better question is why haven't they reverted to contact nukes in mass launch situations? The original reason the laser head was so much more effective was that enemy point defense got much more effective as the warhead got closer, but with pod-launched MDMs that reason is no longer valid. The accuracy of the point defense is irrelevant if you can swamp it with far more targets than it can service in the time available.
Manty and GSN ships don't have to deal with that too much since they can fight with their wedge blocking contact hits, but Havenite and other navies are vulnerable to physical hits or nukes going off close aboard.
Certainly the MDMs are terminal approach are moving quickly enough that the improved PDLC hit percentages as they close that last 50,000 km are largely irrelevant because the PDLC clusters get only a shot or two off in the quarter second to so it takes to cover that distance; and in a mass launch there would usually be too many warheads per target to get more than an extra handful.
Certainly the warheads should be able to close to the point of using the directed nuclear blast sidewall "burn" mode. I can see a couple possible reasons they might not try for full contact nuke.
1) At closing speeds in excess of 0.7c the sidewall penetrator necessary to slip the warhead through the sidewall where it can do real damage may be unreliable
2) There may be so many warheads that attempting to go for the contact kill may result in many of them getting fried by friendly fire proximity kills as they all try to mob an area behind the sidewall of no more than, say, 2 km^3.
3) The risk that almost any last minutes rolling of the ship would cause the warheads to impact on the wedge rather than scream through the (relatively) tiny gap between the wedge planes to reach the sidewall.
If you just go for laserhead shots than your warheads only need to reach an area of 50,000 km or less with a view to the target - they can even try to pass ahead or astern of it (giving them shots not protected by sidewall) and so can keep relatively spread out.