Jonathan_S wrote:Undoubtable, like other capital ships in the Honorverse, you'll usually want to use Lenny Dets together in some kind of mutually supporting formation.
You generally don't want to send a single capital ship off to fight an enemy, no mater how much more powerful it is than their individual units. (amusing counterexample is HMS Warspite storming up the Norwegian fiords with only some destroyers escorting her during the 2nd battle of Narvik - blasting German destroyers the second her guns could bear on them. Having her spotter plane up telling her where each target was before she cleared each headland and they could see each other was a major help [g]).
Still, I see one major difference between Lenny Det formations and submarine worfpacks -- how many the navy can afford. Lenny Dets, due to their size and their new technology, are undoubtable significantly more expensive than an SD(P) in terms of material, manhours, or percent of national GPD. Whereas submarines were relatively cheap - Germany could build several wolfpacks worth for less than the cost of a single battleship. Bismarck cost them 200 - 250 million Reichmarks; while a type VII uboat was a mere 4.1 million Reichmarks; so 50 or more uboats (5-6 wolfpacks worth) built for the cost of each BB.
Lenny Dets though are capital ships, not light units like WWI/WWII subs. As mentioned you'll likely use them in some kind of formation - but each formation is a sizable percentage of your entire fleet - so you can't have all that many formations and you'll have to pick and choose were to deploy them.
Whereas a wolfpack were cheap enough Germany could have several deployed in the Atlantic at all times, even allowing for all the other uboats that were in transit, refit/repair, work-up, and leave [remember the rule of thumb that you generally need at least 3 ships in order to keep 1 of them constantly deployed]; plus the uboats assigned to other missions/oceans.
They're not like other capital ships in the Honorverse in many ways. WW2 is far too early for a submarine analogy - spider ships are more like ballistic missile submarines.
I agree that they could be deployed in formations(as the Sharks were forced to) but due to all the unknowns about them, there is still a possibility that each single LD is capable of duplicating the throw weight each Shark squadron had during Oyster Bay and that the original plan had as few as one or two LDs allocated per target in an even wider multisystem strike.
Their stealth is excellent, but those are enormous, very slow ships. Too many of them close together creates a risk that all of them can be exposed by one careless crew.