Sigs wrote:drothgery wrote:Well, kind of? Haven had a lot of advantages that no one else is likely to have...
- a huge stockpile of SD components
- direct observational data on RMN systems
- captured RMN hardware
- the motivation of an actual likely enemy who does have SD(P)s
- an experienced and highly motivated workforce
So you are saying that a heavily industrialized core/shell system that leaves the League and no longer has protection from the League wont have any motivation?
I don't think they'll lack motivation, but it's a different motivation than the PRH and RoH had. They won't be at an existential war: the PRH had just been thoroughly defeated by Operation Buttercup and Nouveau Paris was going to fall if Manticore wanted it. The RoH's motivations were to make sure that the restored Péricard Constitution and the reforms stood firm.
When core/shell systems leave the League they will have experienced, well educated workforce, equal civilian technology compared to the SKM and one hell of a motivation to get warships in service. They no longer have the security of the SLN and in fact many of them will be gearing up their fleet to protect against the SLN because they now have a very real and very legitimate threat. When 10 or more Core/shell systems get together they can throw insane amounts of money at the problem and their population will be highly motivated to build up a fleet before the SLN comes back to blow their industry back to the stone age. Then there is the SLN, in absolute terms even if they lose half of their core/shell systems they will still be able to raise insane amounts of money through taxation and throw that money at each and every problem with thousands of research firms.
In Reality what is an SD(P)? Everyone talks about how hard it is to figure out SD(P)'s and build SD(P)'s but its hard to build SD(P)'s to the level of the RMN but it wouldn't be hard to design and build an SD(P) at the SLN's level. The SLN could put SD(P)'s in service in 4-5 years but they wouldn't be that much more capable then their SD's until they have the technology that makes the SD(P)'s capable to stand up to GA SD(P)'s.
The experience is not comparable. Haven had at that point half a millennium of tradition of warship building, the last 100 years of which spent basically at war, which does bring innovations and removes shortcomings from designs, even with a deteriorating education system. The war must have also completely erased any deficient designs, streamlining what works over what doesn't. They also had the second largest navy in existence, losing only to the SLN. It might have dropped by Buttercup, but it was 20x larger in the wall than the largest League SDF.
The best thing that the League can offer is TIY and other contractors, who didn't have any of the advantages that Haven did.
Putting SD(P)s into service that didn't have the ability to defend against even comparable SD(P)s is asking for suicide crews. It's clear that missile swarms are now counted in the thousands. You need a ship or a squadron that can defend against that before you can achieve an objective. So maybe those SD(P)s can be stop-gap solution (better they than the older deathtraps), but they are not a solution in the long run and not a threat to anyone with enough missiles.
As for observational data? The Havenite Navy had about the same observational data as the SLN, the RMN comes into their system and crushes their picket and moves on, nobody captured an SD(P), nobody gave them the designs in 1915 they had to figure it out for themselves. If they were so motivated to figure it out in 1915 why cant someone else?
You're forgetting all the pre-Buttercup observational data. It's not the same as SD(P)s and capital-ship-graser-armed LACs, but you can extrapolate. Missile engagements had been going up, Havenite ECM and ECCM was improving. And don't forget the shiphandling and doctrine.
At the beginning of the series, the PRN and RMN were thought be slightly ahead of the SLN in terms of tech, but no one knew for sure. We now know that they were 10-20 years ahead. And they leapt forward due to the war.