Captain Golding wrote:The only drive a missile has is the wedge. No Wedge then the missile is ballistic and thus predictable to the CIWS of the target.
Yes there are some thrusters to orient the laserhead but these are very limited.
Liek a Knight in Chess a Laserhead missile probably needs to maintain a degree of indirection so that its wedge is between it and the target for a lot of time but also always moving so that it's not easy to get a CM inside it's wedge.
penny wrote:A missile is not trying to achieve a zero/zero intercept with the ship. Nor is it trying to hold station. So why should its ballistic nature matter? At the moment of fire a wedge is a liability.
Jonathan_S wrote:Don’t forget that the wedge does shield the missile from the PDLC fire of most of the rest of the enemy formation.
That isn't
exactly how I understand that the RMN’s mutual defense doctrine works. The massed mutual defense of tightly packed formations is
mostly effective against missiles
before they breach the CM envelope. Mostly. It is a very effective strategy that brings thousands of CMs to bear against heavy salvos; wiping them from the plot in job lots. But once the missiles breach that thick CM envelope, the mutual effectiveness of tight formations is reduced dramatically. The formation does not enjoy the same massed protection from the total of the fleet’s PDLCs. The geometry of the problem makes it impossible once the missiles breach the CM envelope. There will be a limited amount of ships with the correct firing arc on any given missile with its PDLCs.
Again, the geometry simply makes it impossible for certain PDLCs. How well do you think you could hit a target flying past your window at a significant fraction of C? Besides, at that point inside the formation, any given ships’ PDLCs are concerned with its own asses. Now, if it has been determined that the enemy fire has been concentrated on just one or two, or a few of your consorts, then other
very specific ships in the formation can pay you some attention. The CO can even order the ships in tighter to share PDLC fire. But at that point, do not expect hordes of the missiles that have breached the outer CM envelope and/or have reached attack range to be stopped. If many at all.
Also, and again as I repeat hearing from text, the PDLCs wait for the exact moment the missile intends to fire before engaging. If not, it would take a barrage of PDLC fire before killing a single missile on the fly. PDLCs effectively wait for the birds to “perch.”
HAVE YOU EVER SHOT SKEET? SAME CONCEPT.
It is difficult to hit the target before it reaches its peak altitude.
And … the effectiveness of the PDLCs currently depend on the ease of targeting and hitting the missile's huge wedge. If you eliminate the liability of the wedge that has now become a targeting beacon – along with the warning it is about to fire – and the survivability of the missile will approach one hundred percent IMO. It won't matter that there is no longer a wedge to protect it anymore. A missile fires in microseconds. Any PDLC fire, even if it is lucky enough to be on target, will be like firing into the transporter beam well into the sequence of Captain Kirk beaming aboard ship. A moment too late and a laser stilleto too short. Plus, do consider that PDLC fire from the ships farther away on a target as small as a missile body that has shed its inert volume and has no wedge will be next to impossible to hit. Unless you have a country boy manning the PDLCs and he has experience shooting needles in a haystack.
Jonathan_S wrote:Dropping the wedge might make the missile slightly harder to see ( though by that point the ships should have it vector nailed down extremely well, and without the wedge it can’t take evasive action) but it’s now exposed to defensive fire from any direction, not just from a narrow disc that can slip between its wedge planes. (We’ve even seen missiles pitch up or down to shield themselves from defenses until seconds (e.g. against the triple ripple)
It likely also gives them protection from fratricidal from other nearby warheads (though with large salvos there can still be a bit of that). And if you drop it too soon the target can roll and the missile won’t be able to try to redirect around the wedge to attempt a passing snap shot.
Also if you’re going for a contact nuke hit you need the wedge as it’s an integral part of the sidewall penetrator that gets the nuke through)
Dropping the wedge will simply make the target “slightly harder” to see??? It will make it
impossible to see; in time. The wedge is being tracked. Then it disappears as will the target to the targeting system in the midst of so many brighter icons. Simply knowing the vector isn't enough. It isn't even precise enough as it is. Targeting relies on the size of the wedge from the missile and the CM having difficulty missing each other. Targeting also relies on the accuracy of the PDLCs hitting -- or not being able to miss -- a huge target like the wedge.
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The artist formerly known as cthia.
Now I can talk in the third person.