Maldorian wrote:Currently on Earth, navy ships are mostly classified by role, not by weight. We are talking about Honorverse, and here is the weight mostly the classification standard.
Like I wrote at the start: Manticorian ships are drifting more into the weight range of the next higher class.
Again, Manticore doesn't categorize ships by weight. (Well, except for the split between dreadnoughts and superdreadnoughts; the only real difference there is that SDs are bigger dreadnoughts)
They define a role, and then work out how big a ship they need for that role.
That
why their ships are getting bigger. The role then envision for destroyer, cruiser, and battlecruiser remain largely the same; but as the technological and threat environment changes the systems needed to perform that role, and the size of the ship required to carry them, changes.
They don't build bigger ships just for the heck of it. All else being equal smaller ships are less expensive, so you can afford more of them. So there's a constant tension between having enough ships to do everything needed and having ships capable enough to fulfill their roles. That tends to keep ships designed for roles close to what the navy perceives as the minimum viable size to perform that role during the ship's projected service life.
Even if we look at the pre-war era we saw size go up as laserheads and other things started changing the threat environment.
RMN destroyers grew from:
68,200 tons in 1819 to
78,000 tons by 1867 to
104,000 tons by 1899
RMN light cruisers grew from:
88,250 tons in 1820 to
126,000 tons in 1856 to
154,750 tons in 1902
RMN heavy cruisers grew from:
223,000 tons in 1809 to
246,500 tons in 1851 to
305,250 tons in 1893
and RMN battlecruisers grew from:
784,750 tons in 1786 to
834,000 tons in 1863 to
877,500 tons in 1896
But they were still considered DDs, CLs, CAs, and BCs because the newer larger ships were the new minimum required to continue filling the roles the RMN held for those ship classes.
The multi-drive missile and pod based combat caused another massive growth. But the current designs at:
188,750 or 123,500 tons for a destroyer
146,750 tons for a light cruiser
483,000 tons for a heavy cruiser and
1,750,750 or 2,519,750 tons for a battlecruiser
Because those were seen as the new minimum viable sizes to continue performing their respective roles going forward -- at least as of the time their designs were finalized. Those numbers may, and likely will, end up getting pushed higher as the thread environment evolves and/or the RMN gets more experience operating in the current threat environment.
But that doesn't make obsolete cruisers into destroyers. Sure they're now about the same tonnage -- but they lack the systems that pushed destroyers up into that tonnage range. So they're obsolete, 2nd or 3rd line, cruisers -- not front line destroyers. Redesignating them to destroyers just confuses things.