I'm not arguing about the absolute effectiveness of battleships and battleriders. I'm arguing about the comparative effectiveness of the two. Any problems that applies equally to both BR based navies and BB based navies are irrelevant to that question.I guess the BB fleet's home defenses will also be paid by the system defense budgets, as your, that also must pay for your spare BRs to make up losses.
If someone musters the strength to jump into one of your systems and destroy the system defenses, it's going to hurt and take time to replace. The difference here is that a BR based navy can use its tenders to shift monitors from system to system to minimize the strategic weaknesses inflicted by those losses whereas the BB based navy will need to have invested in (i.e. spent some of its budget on) dedicated transports to do so.
Matt argued that tenders that lost their riders would be useless for the two years it would take to replace them (in the same way that lost battleships are "useless" for the four years it takes to replace them). With proper defense planning (i.e. building monitors that can be used as riders), this is not the case. Rather, the tenders will be back in business in the time it takes to pick up some monitors and the defenses of some rear worlds will be reduced for the two years it takes to replace them.
Yes.I've found your earlier posts about time to mobilize and counterattack quite optimist. In it you assumed that:
-You have a strong enough TF in suport range.
I some cases I would know where they are, but no, I'm not assuming that I do. I'm assuming that I have enough couriers and destroyers to send one to every system within 6 parsecs.-You know where your supporting forces are (if this battle is not the only operation on the area, there's a nice possibility that any mobile forces it has have jumped from the position you assumed them on the last weeks, so sending your courrier to a wild chase trying to find them.
I'm also assuming that there was a reason I left my riders behind to shoot up attackers when I ran away with my tenders and the only reason I can think of is having some reinforcements in range so that I judge the loss of my riders worth it. Can you think of any other?
Canonical wisdom is that battleriders get reamed when attacked by superior forces and battleships do not. That's only true if the attacker can force an engagement. If the tenders can just bug out carrying the riders with them, they escape just as easily as battleships would.
There is one situation where the claim is true: If the riders engage in an even fight that turns against them, they do get reamed. But that assumes a fight that is fair enough to tempt the commander of the BR force to engage in it. I think it is a significant countervailing consideration that it costs the BB based navy six times as much to get that even fight. And while battleships can bug out of a losing fight (I will assume they're smart enough not to go into a fight with empty fuel tanks), the battleships that got their fuel tanks shattered before the battle turned against them won't be able to get away. Seeing as the loss of each of them is equal to ten or twelve times the loss of a battlerider (the tender part of the battlerider/tender slice cost isn't lost with the rider), I don't think that engaging in even fights is a winning strategy for the BB navy. I will admit I haven't actually worked out the sums, so I suppose I could be wrong.
Hans
Last edited: