Theemile wrote:If you were going for an up the kilt shot, you would need to start the maneuver well in advance of the actual attack. You would need to rotate the missile body into position BEFORE separating the laserheads, so you would have to drop the wedge early, at around 100,000 Km, rotate the missile body, launch laserheads at ~50,000 KM, then fire as you pass in front of/behind the ship. Depending on the geometry of the engagement, your missile may actually spend MORE time in the PDCL basket than if you went for the sidewalls - none of it with an active wedge.
Guess we don't have a good feeling for how fast a missile change change it's heading while under impeller driver (or under maneuvering thrusters).
I do agree that any up the kilt shot against a ship oriented broadside on to the attack is going to put the missile in the CM and PDLC envelope longer than a sidewall on attack. In the part of the post you didn't quote I even tried to calculate
how much longer they'd be exposed to that defensive fire.
We've certainly seen laserheads make "snap shots" as they overfly an interposed wedge - but I guess those aren't subject to defensive fire from that ship while lining up for that (as far as we've seen only Keyhole allows a ship to engage incoming missiles while rolled behind its wedge -- though even without that other ships in formation with it could try to engage those missiles).
Although at 2nd Hancock, when Shrikes were first used, the Peeps had some success firing missiles
past the LAC and having their laserheads target backwards into the open kilt of the LAC's wedge!! That makes a perpendicularly passing shot like we've been discussing look easy
"Most of the Shrikes lost at Second Hancock had, in fact, been killed by "up-the-kilt" laser head snap shots at close range—exactly the sort of attack the designers had believed would be impossible. But while the firing solutions for that sort of attack against something as small and agile as a Shrike were, indeed, difficult to generate, the odds of success were much better than prebattle analyses had projected, and it took only a single one of them to kill an LAC." [AoV]