cthia wrote:Thanks for clearing up my error in thinking the ACM was located in the midst of the brood. However, if it is trailing, why aren't its sensors affected by the wedges of its brood?* If it is trailing far enough behind that it isn't, that should also put it out on a limb alone against a stealthy opponent that can isolate and strike at it laterally.
I thought the sensors of the ACM are much more robust which is important during autonomous mode, but if the wedges of the brood obscure it ...
I must be in error about the ACM sensors, which may rely solely on a FTL signal from the mother ship? If that is true, then it may be impossible for a ACM to ram anyway, as we have discussed and argued over in the past.
Where are my disconnects?
What Jonathan said, but here's some of the tex from Storm From Shadows, which say much the same thing.
"Once we'd taken up ways to deal with that particular objection," Halstead went on, "it became evident that our only choices were to either strip the drive stage out of the birds, as we'd originally planned, or else to add a dedicated missile. One whose sole function would be to provide the FTL link between the firing ship and the attack birds. There were some potential drawbacks to that, but it allowed us not only to retain the full range of the MDM, but actually required very few modifications to the existing Mark 23. And, somewhat to the surprise of several members of our team, using a dedicated control missile actually increased tactical flexibility enormously. It let us put in a significantly more capable—and longer-ranged—transciever, and we were also able to fit in a much more capable data processing and AI node. The Mark 23s are slaved to the control bird—the real 'Apollo' missile—using their standard light-speed systems, reconfigured for maximum bandwidth rather than maximum sensitivity, and the Apollo's internal AI manages its slaved attack birds while simultaneously collecting and analyzing the data from all of their on-board sensors. It transmits the consolidated output from all of its slaved missiles to the firing vessel, which gives the ship's tactical department a real-time, close-up and personal view of the tactical environment.
I'd have to grab the texts from mainline Honor books to find the bits that describe Apollo as riding behind the attack missiles. Which means finding them, I only have this because I happen to be rereading Shadows series atm.
But overall for long-distance strikes, your missiles are configured for maximum sensitivity because obviously at long distance hitting them (accurately) with a transmission to update their orders is difficult. You only use maximum broadband for close to maybe mid-range missiles because there's no lag in signal transmitting and you can 'guide' the missile a lot better, and it responds much faster in broadband mode.
Apollo removes that signal lag, so all your attack missiles are constantly receiving orders from effectively point blank, which is what allows Apollo-guided missiles to actually thread around incoming CMs (like at Lovat, or Manticore).
That maximum broadband allows for much finer control of the missiles, and Apollo has an upsized 'brain' compared to the Mk23s. And obviously if Apollo is the "brains" you don't want it right up front with an equal chance to be struck by CMs. So you keep it marginally back, and even use the attack missiles to conceal it from the target(s) by having physical missile wedges between them.
Or to put it another way, remember the Battle of Selker Sheer? Honor with Wayfarer deliberately flying in and out of being directly between the Peep Sultan and "Artemis" especially as they'd power up another decoy drone. Apollo is doing the same thing, but putting Mk23's between it and the target, so the target cannot spot and destroy the Apollo's before they can update the local missiles. Losing a Mk23 or three won't change how tremendously lethal the other 3 would be, with an Apollo still giving them up to date information, even sharing info from other Apollo's.
To reduce that chance of being sniped, Apollo
cannot be on the front line. But it can't be too far behind either or you'd be able to distinguish it as two distinct salvos, one big one followed by one that is strangely only 1/8th the size. That leads to people asking questions, and that could lead to counters being thought up faster. So the Apollo's are right on the Mk23 coattails, close enough it appears to be 1 salvo & Mk23s can be used to physically (and gravimetrically shield) the Apollo and it's FTL emitter with their own wedges, but far enough back they are less likely to eat a countermissile.