munroburton wrote:LDs aren't going to be that eggshelly. If they resemble forts, they are definitely not eggshells but something that has to be pounded into wreckage with large gobs of firepower. Since SVW, we know multiple battlecruisers don't perform that well against single dreadnoughts - and a LD is likely to be exponentially tougher than that single dreadnought, if less maneuverable.
BCs and DNs have similar acceleration. The incident involving HMS Bellerophon was within energy range, so those BCs never stood a chance. You're right that you don't send a smaller ship, even a squadron of them, against a larger ship's energy range. Note not a single RMN/SLN engagement ended up in energy range.
With stand-off weapons, though, that's a different story. Yes, that LD can probably launch conventional missiles and has a lot of them. That's its defence, actually: it has to lure the BC squadrons to within its missile range and less than the time the BCs take to transition out into alpha, if it's caught out of the hyperlimit.
Unlike forts, the LD would be operating in enemy territory, far from resupply. And it's burdened by having alpha nodes and a hyper generator, so it doesn't have as deep an ammo stock as a fort does. It's also trying to approach a target, unlike a fort. So a fort strategy doesn't work for an LD.
Or it could just come all guns blazing in the open. Reinforcements for the defenders are going to take a couple of weeks to arrive, at the minimum. But this goes back to my point: would the MAN think of abandoning stealth in order to pursue military victory?
Those are not nice people. Against weaker targets, they can pop over the hyper wall quietly, fire from beyond the hyper limit and leave, to hell with the collateral damage. They only needed such severe reconaissance during Oyster Bay because they were operating on a shoestring and had to ensure every missile and every torpedo was precisely on target.
Close to the hyperlimit, they're going to be detected in almost any system. Catching torpedoes at that range is not going to be difficult.
If they were to flush missiles towards the planet and then leave, that might work. But are they going to go for blatant & explicit Eridani Edict Violations? From David's posts, we don't think this is going to happen. I don't know how they'll justify, though.
That would be why all wormhole nodes should be among the first-rank targets. Someone like Manticore is supposed to be sitting there reeling from Yawata 2.0 with Beowulf, San Martin and Basilisk immediately reporting the same attacks, then getting those dispatch boats arriving from everywhere screaming for aid over the next year.
Yawata 2.0 is unlikely to work on a Manticore tier one system, or Haven or New Berlin, Grayson or Beowulf. The same strategy is unlikely to work twice. So how do they attack those systems?
If the good guys start from scratch, they're going to need closer to that thousand years - or they can find yet another long-lost colony with several billion humans prepared to go to war.
Population growth is not that difficult if you have an impetus. None of the diaspora of Mankind seem to have had it. There's no reason why they couldn't match or outpace Darius if they needed to, with no slaves required. Especially with prolong, where your average human is going to remain productive and reproductive for 300 years.
It's going to take centuries, agreed. But I don't think it needs to come close to a thousand.