Thanks for the input.
The problem is the missile loadouts for the Sag-B's are probably rather less than the 85% of 7524 missiles launched in 19 salvo's;- 6396 or 2132 missiles each. At 78 tons each, that's 166,296 tons in a cruiser massing only 425,000 tons in SotS, or over 39%, or more than 50% greater than the Sag-C's missile fraction which was noted for its very heavy missile load and which is almost exactly the same as the Nike's.
Given its far older design origins, I doubt it carried so many missiles without it being remarked upon somewhere. From THotQ, I believe the Star Knight class had somewhere between 600-900 missiles and that was considered a heavy load back then; on the other hand, 19 double salvo's is 1596 missiles which would actually be more than the Sag-C's missile tonnage warload even with the 120 extra as well as over 29% of the Sag-B's mass, assuming the Sag-B's didn't control some Mark-16's, which is another point to clarify.
4788 missiles would be over 63% of the 19 salvo's, but that leaves 2736 as Mark 16's, of which only 950 could be launched during the 19 salvo's 20 seconds interval, leaving 1786 to have been launched prior to the first volley's activation; taking at least 10.8 minutes, while traveling 9.8 million km.
If Phantom could do that, why not also launch the remaining 58.5% of the Nike's Mk-16's? It would take just over another 23 minutes.
On the fire control side, rotating by 7X the Nike's assumed 400 fire control links would account for the 2736 Mk-16's (but why isn't it fully divisible by 50?), although if Phantom could handle 14 simultaneous salvo's (5 had hit the SLN TF by the time the 19th was launched), 200 Mark-16's in each should have been possible.
If the 3 Sag-B's launch 2 double salvo's of 84 missiles each in the 20 second interval, or 252 combined, that leaves 144 for Mark-16's, with 94 apparently previously launched; again why isn't it exactly divisible by 50?
If the Nike can handle 2800 missiles in 14 volley's that leaves the Sag-B's handling 2744 in those 14 salvo's, which after the rotating FCL's means each has 131 FC links or more than a Sag-C (128); again unlikely.
It may be silly to pick at these things, but I'm missing something or several things, and an explanation would further improve my enjoyment of the scene.
Thanks for trying, with my best wishes.
munroburton wrote:lyonheart wrote:Back to the Battle of Hypatia, I still don't see how the 396 missile salvo's were arranged (how many each ship launched etc), nor how the Sag-B's had enough missiles for 19 volley's unless they carried more missiles than the Sag-C normally did (1200, 1320 warload), or were controlling Mark-16's previously launched by Phantom (before the first salvo was activated) but regardless it means the bulk of the 7524 missiles were Mark-16's launched from Phantom, at least an extra 2974 over the 950 in the 19 salvo's, or 118 minutes before the first activation, and if the Mark-16 could wait 18 minutes, could it wait 20, 30 or 40 (actually 39.6 for 132 volleys?
These and other questions continue to puzzle if not haunt my understanding.
Any insights will be very appreciated.
Bet wishes to all,
I believe your confusion arises from the different launcher times very rarely mentioned in the books - IIRC, it takes about twice as long to cycle a MK16's launcher as it does a MK14's launcher, because of the time required to start the MK16's microfusion reactor. The Sag-Bs are firing twice for every time Phantom fires.
Every ~35 seconds:
HMS Phantom launches 50 MK16 DDMs.
The 4x Sag-Bs could each be launching 42 MK14 missiles twice, for 84*4, totalling 336.
There's some fudging because the Sag-Bs are(were?) only capable of adjacent off-bore firing. The numbers are theoretically as such:
Broadside-on: 19+2+2, 23 per salvo.
Chase-on: 19+19+2, 40 per salvo.
Wedge-on: 19+19+2+2, 42 per salvo.
The Sag-Bs don't have enough fire control links for the latter two of those options - but that's irrelevant due to Phantom's pair of baby keyholes providing all the fire control they needed.
This means the Sag-Bs fired about 85-90% of the missiles during that battle, not Phantom. I'm not certain how to explain a warload of at least 1600 missiles for the Sag-B with the Sag-C's numbers - the easiest way out is to accept that MK16s are probably that much larger than MK14s.
Yes - I just checked IEH. Before Honor shot him down, White Haven was up in arms about the proposed missiles effectively reducing each waller's total ammo load by about 20%. That almost perfectly fits the Sag-B's 1600 being reduced to ~1200-1320. It doesn't stretch the imagination to see the RMN accepting that kind of trade-off again.
Especially when these few MK16s did the bulk of the killing at Hypatia anyway. The MK14s' main contribution was to saturate the Solarian anti-missile defences so that more MK16s would survive into firing range.