Jonathan_S wrote:They can - but the enemy rarely fires just one salvo. So by the time the first salvo reaches PDLC range the CMs are usually being fired to meet the 3rd salvo as it enters the outer point defense zone and at leakers from the 2nd salvo (in the middle point defense zone) which got through the first wave of CMs.
(This is also why modern LAC screens are positioned so far out -- they attrit the missiles before they even reach the main body of the fleet's defensive zones and let's them focus on only the surviving missiles. Plus engaging missiles sooner forces them to activate their ECM sooner giving your systems more time to work out the real targets vs the spoofs; and try to kill any dedicated jammers and decoys -- giving the closer-in defenses an easier time)
You could instead aim those CMs at the very close 1st salvo; though that'd have them flying straight through the PDLC firing arcs and blocking some PDLC shots. But the main reason you don't is then nothing has whittled down the follow-on salvos and they'll hit you like a tsunami.
Also depends on whether the ships that would fire those CMs have turned wedge-on or not. As penny noted, the full roll takes 2min 45s, which is way more than the time between salvos crash down on you. There is no time to roll broad-side on to fire more CMs between salvos. If you've rotated wedge-on, you're going to remain in that formation for the duration of the salvos.
At this stage in the war, the shipkillers have a duration of 180s and the CMs only 60s. So the earliest you can fire a CM is 120s from arrival (not exactly; I didn't do the Maths, but it's close enough). Given that the wallers couldn't complete the turn before the shipkillers arrive and given that you want to fire more than one wave of CMs for interception at extreme range, what this tells me is that doctrine at this time was to fight missiles broadside-on, or nearly so. That means they can use their PDLCs.
It looks like later the rotation became practical. The pod-launching wallers of the late Second War, using the Keyhole II platforms, were defending entirely wedge-on. Likewise, in the Battle of the Ajay-Prime Warp Bridge, Sir Martin Lessem's formation fired 5 waves of CMs and rotated to face the SLN's missiles wedge-on too. In both cases, the shipkiller missiles are being fired from pods, so the ships don't have to keep their tubes facing the enemy to launch. But their CM tubes must have been.
Unless CMs can be fired off-bore too?