Thinksmarkedly wrote:Indeed, SL stealth tech is lacking, but the point is we have little direct comparison between RMN scanning tech and MAlign's stealth. We know they didn't see the GTs during Oyster Bay, but those were flying on a significant fraction of the speed of light and they turned their spiders on a day out.
That
is the wild card isn't it? Though the reverse is also true. The GAs elaborate net hasn't been tested against first rate MA stealth. IMO, the stealth isn't dependent on speed. Albeit, it may matter regarding the range in which it engages its drive, and/or rather, if it engages "within" the GA detection net. If the enemy is
aware that they have been fired, then speed might be important. Might be. Do recall the many times the RMN fired at Havenite ships then shut down the drive. The Havenites couldn't track them although they had a reasonable idea where they should be, and the Havenites had something the GA won't have. A workable vector. Firing without an impeller drive doesn't allow your enemy to gauge a missile's acceleration. Which also might make it even harder to find them. GR drones couldn't be localized even when they were known to be there. MA stealth is better.
Thinksmarkedly wrote:At 1 to 2 million km, the Lenny is relatively stationary to the target. If it fires a conventional missile from that distance, the missile will take 1 to 2 minutes to hit the target, which is plenty for the defenders to bring up walls and to fire back. At that distance, a conventional missile is a suicide mission for little upside.
However, if they get that close they can drop off pods that will light off at the Lenny's discretion, i.e., after it is long gone.
If by conventional missile you mean Cataphracts, then all too true. But if by Malign design conventional is Remontoire's hybrid GT, it won't matter if the GA has time to bring up sidewalls. Scores of GA missiles hitting a ship with wedge up will still destroy it. I imagine scores of a 3-second firing missile from he!! will do the same.
ThinksMarkedly wrote:If it fires a GT, then the torpedo will take even longer to reach the target. Its range probably is much bigger, so it doesn't need to get that close. But even if it needs to go from 1.1 million km to 700,000, the travel time is 368 seconds. On the other hand, it will be bringing its spider up MUCH closer to the defenders' sensors. There's a good chance that it'll be picked up. And the time is long enough for RDs to be vectored in to see what's going on.
GTs deployed at a little over five minutes out doesn't frighten you? You got that much ice in your veins? LOL
cthia wrote:Pods cannot risk firing on something "between" them and the planet, in such close proximity to the planet. Even IF at that point, Lennys are detected. No?
ThinksMarkedly wrote:Right, but unless it's in low- or medium orbit, there may be pods that can have a firing solution without endangering the planet. Plus there's telemetry from the ground, which can guide the missiles to target and not the planet.
And don't forget that this is the defenders' planet. It's not an EE violation if they accidentally strike their own planet. They may reason that it's better to risk a missile grazing the atmosphere than to surrender to the MAlign.
But those are good points in favour of having OWPs. If those are in mid- or even high orbit, the planet is always behind them.
Albeit, and I'll risk speaking for you as well; we would all imagine it'd tickle the MA pink if it could cause the GA to kill millions of its own people. I hope it will be a Manty captain who makes that decision. A Havenite or Grayson captain making that call and killing millions on planet may send a negative ripple back thru the Alliance. Poor bastard; bastard because no one is going to claim to know him afterwards. Regardless, your point is solid. I just wouldn't want to be the lamb to make the call of the lesser of those two evils. Especially if among the dead is Honor and or the Queen.
cthia wrote:I saw your calculations. I'm just not certain they will alter the equation if Lennys can get that close. Consider the range the Sharks had to launch GTs and the range the Lennys will launch. Even if TOA is an hour, then Christmas dinner isn't exactly late. And, even if Lennys launch normal, first generation GTs from their closest range, time on target will still be too short for any target to enjoy Christmas.
ThinksMarkedly wrote:The difference is the final speed. At 150 gravities, a torpedo would need over 45 hours and 130 AU to reach 0.8c. Even for 0.3c it's nearly 17 hours and over 18 AU (2.75 billion km) under acceleration.
The only alternative is that the LD itself accelerates to such a high speed in the general direction towards the target before launching from MUCH further out. At that point, the LD picks a random direction and accelerates away, while the torpedoes accelerate towards it. This is a workable attack mode, but it's the exact opposite of firing from close range.
The problem in this scenario is that the LD will still come close. The best it can hope for is a close fly-by. If the GT has a constant acceleration of 150 gravities and the the LD can pull an emergency acceleration of 250, then they separate at 400 gravities. It would need to launch at about 65 million km at no more than 0.3c to be over 1 million km from the target when the GTs fire.
In this scenario, the spiders were turned on very far out, so the likelihood of being picked up is small.
I suspect the Lennys will have every tactic we can conceive of in it's reportoire, to be used depending on the situation and objectives.* I also imagine the Lennys will have more than one version of its missile. Much like the GA.**
cthia wrote:I don't expect Lennys to risk less than a light second either. Albeit I'm not prepared to think they can't achieve it under ideal conditions -- whatever ideal conditions might entail. I'm considering that the author is using the analogy of modern subs. Those subs launched from mocking distances as well, but in certain instances fired from "within" the blockade.
ThinksMarkedly wrote:No military planner works with ideal conditions, at least not for long. The first attempts will be made under worst conditions planned and then they can refine as data indicates how well the stealth is performing.
All too true. Do note, however, their tech has been deployed a few times with much success. They've had an opportunity to do some of that refining already.
* ** I think I failed to include here one of the notions I had in the "Lenny's are Coming" thread. Namely, for high value, critical targets like the Big 5, the Lennys will hunt in packs, utilizing the U-boats "Wolfpack" tactic. An entire squadron of Trojan Horses snuck into your garage has to be a nightmare. Each using different tactics and firing different missiles at different times and targets.
It's certainly loads of fun to speculate from the rear of the class.