tlb wrote:cthia wrote: Why is firing off-bore so difficult? If I didn't already know better, I'd think it'd be a common ability from the very beginning of missile combat.
This is just my guess. The firing bore actively imparts velocity to the missile by means of a mass driver. It was reported that the reason the old pods were less effective is that they lacked any mass driver, so those missiles were slower that the ship launched ones. Now off-bore firing requires scrubbing the initial velocity to fly in a completely different direction. Therefore until you had more powerful wedges or multi-drives on the missiles, they would lack the velocity that made them so hard to intercept when they reached the target.
Plus you need a lot more fire control links on the axis you point at the enemy. Classically a hammerhead's chase fire control was designed to handle a couple salvos of its chase tubes, so using a Star Knight CA as an example that's just 3 tubes so maybe links for 6-12 missiles. To make it copy what the later various Saganami-class CAs can do it would need enough to handle that plus both broadsides, so suddenly you need to find room to mount links for 27 tubes; even if you omit redundancy just 27 tubes is a 2-5x increase in links!!!
(Though it'd be easier to find space for just double the links for one broadside to control missiles launched by both. However the need for the far broadside's missiles to fly safely around some side of the ship's giant wedge would cut a bit into their range and terminal velocity)
IIRC when off bore firing was introduced in the Shrikes there was some mention of needing a new generation of molycirc that could handle the acceleration associated with whipping the missile around up to 135 degrees off bore. For a little while that made me wonder if off-bore firing used something like a tractor beam to pivot the launched missile onto its new vector before drive lights off; but RFC said no; it was all done by the drive.
Though that gets back to the claim that broadside launchers (and new style pods) impart significant (and important) velocity to missiles. Yet that base velocity doesn't seem to show up in the performance numbers sometimes given for missile combat. (Because if the launcher velocity is irrelevant then you could have done a low acceleration off-bore launch be using the missile's thrusters to pivot it towards its target after launch but before wedge activated)
So mostly it was probably theme driven, RFC initially wanted broadside to broadside ship combat, so missiles needed to fire roughly perpendicular to ship facing/