Jonathan_S wrote:Brigade XO wrote:Hhese are spider drive weapons so they don't have any wedge protection at all and unlike Barricade or even counter missiles, they would be destroyed by the wedge of a shipkiller they got too close to- not mutual destruction as in a counter missile. Barricade had the advantage of RMN multi-drive missiles so they were interpenetrating the incoming SLN missile volleys when the SLN missiles were in ballistic mode - so no mutual destruction.
I thought he was suggesting this for the graserhead cataphracts that Galton had -- weaker than the grasers on the spider torp; but much higher acceleration. OTOH I don't know whether or not you can fire their graser with their wedge up.
And Barricade benefitted too much from the power of the plot.
Yes, it says the Mk23 wedge is bigger than a standard missiles but smaller than a CM's -- but Catapracts use a CM wedge for their second stage so they should be staying far enough apart that there's no wedge fratricide when those bigger CM wedges come up. Meaning that they should have been offset from each other by more than the width of even a Mk23's wedge.
Yet it claims that 72 missiles on high-high power settings ran their wedges through the first 500 missile salvo; and took out 409 of them. Okay, even inside that one salvo some might have been flying 'in train' 2 or 3 deep (which the book mentions as a tactic against heavy CM fire) -- but each Mk23 had to average a wedge impact on 5.68 Cataphracts!
Even if they were piled up 3 deep how do you hit twice that many when they should be too far apart for your wedge to hit two columns?
(And even if you want to hit the defense with 3 missile 'in train' it'd be stupid to position them like that during the ballistic segment. If your wedge activation timing is off by even fractions of a second the rearmost missile could run over the two leading ones. It'd make far more sense to remain abreast and only tuck into train after the 2nd stage wedges have all come up)
So it seems to require significant and pointless stupidity on the SLN part to artificially bunch them so close they'd be within mutual wedge fratricide range during the ballistic segment (say by using RCS thrusters. But what's the point when you'd have to spread them again before the second stage could light-off?) so that the RMN trick can be maximally effective.
Yes, I was suggesting the graserhead Cataphracts. I don't think the tactic would be possible with ordinary g-torps. And it'd be very expensive.
And Jonathan, even if the tactic only worked once, that would be one battle or series of battles. Which would be fine. The MAN needs a short victorious war. Are you suggesting that Apollo can adjust on the fly? The RMN couldn't adjust on the fly against the Triple Ripple. Sonja had to work out the solution once the after action report came in. IOW, at a later date.
It might not be as easy to adjust as you think. At range, the GA's warships would not know when the Cataphracts are ready to fire. Unlike when missiles are attacking ships. Plus, I didn't think missiles could withstand 3-second firing grasers.
About the SL launches. I was under the impression that their missile launches were like their formation as far as separation. The GA would not accept their huge separation between warships; and Apollo launches are packed tightly together. So, Barricade? I dunno.