Theemile wrote:The hammerheads of a ship are the most armored portions of the ship - they are designed to attempt to absorb such hits and shrug them off. Which is not to say such hits do not do damage, especially on smaller ships, but these vulnerable areas are the most protected against such strikes.
Luke's shot wasn't up the throat, or up the Kilt - it was... up the anus - into a small thermal exhaust port, and exploding a way down the exhaust tubing - which lead to the main station reactor, the chain reaction cause by the missiles followed down the tube causing it to catastrophically overheat and explode.
An analogous Honorverse example would be a missile going up the kilt, flying into an open missile tube, crashing through the missile handling hardware, and into the magazine where it exploded, taking out a nearby reactor's controls, causing the reactor to explode.
The 1st gen SD(P)s had an analogous vulnerability.
A hit to the aft hammerhead had a chance that it'd come in while the pod bay was open which would let it smash straight through all the missile pods and into the ship's vitals. Though proportional to the ship's size any of the 6 pod bay doors is far larger than the Death Star's thermal exhaust port. (OTOH you're not guaranteed that a shot into the pod bay will cause a chain reaction and blow a reactor). And of course Manticore's 2nd gen SD(P), the Invictus-class, added another internal armored cylinder this one wrapping tightly around the pod bay; protecting the ship's vitals from hits coming in via that path as well.
But back to the original question - yep hammerheads are the most heavily armored part of the ship. And that's part of why a down the throat shot isn't guaranteed to kill the ship. That armors there to help offset the fact that (ignoring recent inventions of bow/stern and buckler walls) the hammerheads don't have sidewall protection fore or aft.
Though it's still, despite the passive armor, going to be more damaging that an equivalent shot that has to go through a sidewall.
In fact we've seen several ships survive down the throat shots, starting with HMS Fearless at Basilisk where a laser-head managed to go off "less than a thousand kilometers from Fearless's prow". And then "a sliver of a second later" had a glancing collision with the plasma left behind by the warhead and missile body.
It did a
lot of damage, despite the hammerhead's passive protections -- but it obviously didn't kill the ship and Fearless went on to win that fight.
And yes; a 'down the throat' shot would do the same level of damage whether or not a ship had its wedge up.
But with the wedge down the 'down the throat' shot isn't necessarily the most dangerous one.
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As we said, the hammerheads are the most heavily armored part of a ship (and for destroyers maybe the only armored part of the ship). And because they're a relatively small part of the ship it's not too expensive, nor does it take up too much mass or volume, to provide significant armor facing fore and aft.
Broadsides, which are normally somewhat protected by sidewalls, carry somewhat less armor than hammerheads, despite being the most likely portion of the ship to be hit. They're just too large to be practical to armor quite as thickly as the smaller hammerheads.
But the dorsal and ventral surfaces are normally almost immune from weapons fire because they're directly under the wedge planes. (It's possible for a particularly lucky shot or laser head from ahead or astern to bypass the hammerheads and slice a shallow impact angle into those surfaces; but that's heading into golden BB territory; though wedge geometry makes that relatively easier from ahead). Because of their vast size (as much surface area as the broadsides) and normally protected position, those often carry little to no armor (though DNs and SDs do usually carry some armor there. And they, as well as some navy's BCs, have a full internal secondary armored cylinder wrapped around their vitals so even a shot that pierces the top or bottom of the ship would have to get through that to get to anything critical). Also, there's no point defense mounted up there because normally it'd be unable to engage without hitting the wedge.
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So with the wedge down it is that top and bottom surface that would be most vulnerable, followed by the broadsides with their armor, and then a down the throat shot on the hammerhead would be the least vulnerable because it still has the ships thickest passive armor. (Plus, as mentioned, a shot against the dorsal or ventral surface would be harder for the ship's point defense to bear on and engage)