penny wrote:The one drawback to an extended range CM doctrine is that it should be less effective. The longer the range that CMs engage, the more dispersed enemy salvos are, except the RMN and RHN. Dunno if we have any details on the flight profiles of pre Andermani missiles. CMs are fired in dense clusters which should be more effective the closer the enemy salvo is to the fleet – where the salvo has maneuvered into more of a closely knit group for attack.
That's less of an issue than just increased control lag.
Even in close the odds of a CM blundering into a different missile is low - either it hits the one it was aimed at or it doesn't. If it doesn't it might be able to be re-tasked against a missile of the next salvo - but it won't have the delta-v to intercept a different missile of the same salvo.
Now in close if a CM lost lock very early there might be time to re-task it onto a different missile of the same salvo -- but at extended ranges there's more time to lose that lock and get re-tasked so that might be a wash.
Because CMs aren't really fired in dense clusters. You can't fire enough of them to cover a significant percentage of the space the incoming salvo covers -- even if you're firing to intercept at 100,000 km out. And you have to maintain sufficient separation that the CMs don't kill each other with wedge fratricide; so they have to have fairly significant seperation.
CMs are fired in streams with, when possible, two or more CM going after the same missile, but that would be two or three CMs in a sequence. So only 1 CM from a defensive salvo would target a given missile, but another CM from the next salvo might also target it in case it evades the first CM. And, if there's time, if the first CM hits the 2nd CM gets retasked.
And one advantage of extended CM engagements is that you've more time and (assuming enough missile to require spreading your CMs thin) you can create more stagger between re-engagements so you will have time to redirect any follow-on CMs whose target has already been destroyed.
Still, engaging further out is generally in addition to rather than instead of engaging in close. So though hit percentages are lower at extended range that's still reducing the number of missiles that make it to the classic close-range CM envelope. Plus it forces the incoming missiles to start running their ECM and decoys earlier so the defending fleet has more time to counter them.