tlb wrote:ThinksMarkedly wrote:But the conclusion is the same: once real fighting starts, plenty of systems will hold back their ships so they aren't damaged or destroyed. And that's assuming they're in fighting trim in the first place: it's easy to imagine that many Shell systems are keeping DNs and even SDs for the prestige, but are actually worse than the SLN in training and doctrine. After all, who would they learn doctrine from anyway?
Please refresh my memory, what fighting is about to start? I can imagine systems holding back their SDF ships to defend their own planet; but not just so they do not get damaged. If the system governments are smart, then they are sending officers to the training classes of major powers and are engaged in war-gaming with friendly powers. The absolute worst thing that they could do is have a few big ships for prestige only and not have their people trained as best as can be done to use those ships. I cannot believe core worlds with SDF ships would not have them train with the SLN, at a minimum.
Take a look at the South American naval races sometimes. They were ordering small numbers of the heaviest ships, when they often couldn't afford to operate them and had no facilities for serious maintenance - having to sail them back to foreign yards (mostly British) where they'd been built for serious service. At one point in 1902 Argentina and Chile agreed to an arms limitation treaty that then had to be modified when they discovered they didn't have any cranes heavy enough to remove their battleship's main turrets as part of the disarmament called for by the treaty!
And that's well before the race entered it's final amusing post-dreadnought phase which ended up with Argintina pissing everybody off by updating their request for bids with proprietary design details from the competing yards in various countries, Chile's attempt to respond giving the Royal Navy HMS Canada during WWI, and the carrier HMS Eagle, and Brazil attempting to supplement their original pair of dreadnoughts (now badly outclassed by the slightly newer super-dreadnoughts); running out of money and selling it during construction to the Ottomans only for it to be seized by the British and serve as HMS Agincourt.
These were very much prestige units, that the countries has limited ability to maintain and operate; and which weren't acquired in sufficient numbers to form a line of battle. Kind of like a Shell, or very prosperous Verge, system with just enough to acquire a waller but not enough to keep it an effective unit.