Armed Neo-Bob wrote:The Havoc class entered RMN in 1860 iirc, and started with hull 001 so the RMN wouldn't have 4 digit hull numbers. Doesn't mean they had all those ships still in service.
HOS only gives data on ships in service at the start of the war (i.e., 1905); otherwise they are just left out of the narrative altogether. Other classes are more than likely. but unless a ship needed to be in a story, they are just omitted.
Members of BuNine who have more info are hobbled by non-disclosure agreements. The author doesn't comment so he can retain more flexibility if he needs it.
IOW, we aren't supposed to know.
A long long long many years ago, a (very frustrated!!!) MaxxQ mentioned during a discussion (ok, there was a very heated argument involving me, Lyonheart and several others) that the RMN had around 1200 frigates before King Roger's buildup; but since all of them--even the Lightnings, built with the Falcons and Apollos by Hauptmann in the 1850's--were retired years before the war, no details were ever given. And he was never, ever that specific again, afaik, but I am not very diligent about reading the posts anymore.
Frigates essentially give up weapons space for endurance--but the frigates were what the RMN used for presence ships and commerce protection, in prefence to the CL's. Another reason why the SLN didn't take them seriously, too, but the conversation pre-dated the expansion into Talbott.
The numbers of BC's were supposed to have been increased to a permanent level of @200 in service after the Battle of Carson, I think; the numbers are disproportionately high compared to other classes, and were used more for force projection than commerce protection.
Wasn't that why it took over a hundred years to build the AD Astra class? No one they needed to deal with had anything that heavy, except Silesia/Manpower. After spanking them with the BB's and forcing them to sign Cherwell, their 200 BCs kept any other fringe systems from bothering them. As for Sollies--all other navies combined were more or less invisible (or insignificant) to the SLN.
YMMV, of course.
Rob
Thanks for the information, Rob.
You're right that nothing above BB would have been necessary for Manticore in the 1700s and early 1800s, before the PRH became expansionist. It was a quiet corner of the Galaxy, with a friendly neighbour, and the only possible thread (SLN) wasn't worth fighting if they got their eyes on you.
I've seen past threads on frigates and how the heated arguments went. Honor server on one in her early career (HMS Osprey (FG-1069)), but I didn't include them in my calculations since there's little information. We don't know whether the Osprey was the very last FG still in service or if the RMN had hundreds of them left. Given the timeframe (1882), I'd guess the former.
I'm still not convinced of explanation for BCs. It's not that Manticore couldn't have built them if they had put their minds to it -- as evidenced by the fact that they could build DNs and SDs when they did want them. It's that it's inconsistent with the CL and CA force levels: 50 CLs, 30 CAs, and 150-200 BCs in 1844?
We know from Lt. Roger Winton that promotion in the RMN was slow. That's also inconsistent with that number of BCs available.
If CLs and CAs were considered useless for force projection and commerce protection, then why hundreds of DDs? And why send newly-minted ship captains to Silesia alone on them?