Edit: tlb beat me to one reference, but hopefully the wider results from my text searches will be a useful addition
cthia wrote:Actually I like the detail. Good.
It reminds me of questions I have had for a while about minelayers. The only time I have seen them is in movies where the crew were dumping them off of the back of a boat. At any rate, I recall researching it quite a while back and learned that destroyers were a common platform used to lay mines. What size ship are minelayers in the HV, and how are they deployed? A minelayer should be able to spit out mines at an alarming rate, if they are to be tactically effective. Otherwise, It appears to be a strategic defense only.
If mines can attack missiles like XO is suggesting, then an LD might be able to lay down covering fire as a layer of defense.
In wet navy terms there have also been mine laying submarines, like the RN's Grampus-class, and mine laying aircraft.
Historical digression - after WWII the US had a hell of a time clearing the air dropped pressure influence mines the USAAF had dropped around Japan during the late war Operation Starvation. (Weren't pulling any punches with that name

) The US didn't actually have good minesweeping methods against that type of mine, and as I recall eventually ended up having to basically take old cargo ships, stuff them full of buoyant materials, rig up shock protection for the small US crew, and sail the things back and forth through the minefields simply sweeping by exhaustion - triggering all the mines and absorbing their blasts.
Anyway, Honorverse minelayers. We see them at Hancock at the start of the war (used as part of Sarnow's BC delaying tactics against the Peep). SVW tells us those were "Erebus-class minelayers" which "are fast-almost as fast as a battlecruiser-and they're configured for rapid, mass mine emplacement." but also notes "Minelayers don't have much in the way of point defense, and their sidewalls aren't much, either"
We also have a passing mention of them in IEH with "two fast minelayers-Yarnowski and Simmons-which have been reconfigured as freighters to provide logistical support" for Tourville's BC sweep.
And Honor ran into some old ones, apparently modified to deploy (though not control) pods, at Arthur in AAC. "The Havenites build their fast fleet minelayers on battlecruiser hulls". (And we see that same engagement from Michelle's point of view in SftS - which is what tlb quoted)
So at least the two navies we've seen the most built their minelayers on BC, or roughly BC-sized, hulls, and are giving them military grade drives, so they also have roughly BC acceleration. (Though, at least for the RMN and presumably for the Peeps, not any serious defenses and quite likely no missiles at all - devoting all that volume for carrying more mines).
Given how easily they can be repurposed for supply ships or evacuation transports (maybe a couple hours at most from dropping mines at Hancock to evacuating half the base's personnel) I'd guess that they don't need special racks or mine handling equipment filling their mine stowage, and likely have the mines stored on fairly normal decks that can also handle cargo containers or personnel. (Though I suppose it's not impossible that they
do have holds full of mine handling gear but it's simply quick to remove for storage ashore, or in an emergency jettisoned) Their mine laying might literally be as simple as throwing cargo container sized pallets of mines out cargo hatches with tractor/pressor beams.
Their ability to evacuate folks at Hancock further suggests that the mine stowage decks aren't vast chasms, and can be pressurized and tied into life support (and that they apparently have enough spare life support to handle mass evacuations for at least a short trip between the stars)
But I think that's about all we know about Honorverse naval minelayers. They weren't significant enough to show up in Jaynes, SITS, or House of Steel.