@ThinksMarkedly
I have a different take on the Mk-23E/F and Apollo pods.
I think its likley that they only had enough missiles for a partial weapons loadout of those 15 Apollo SDPs for the original Sanskrit in February 1921.
Probably all coming off a single experimental production line at the secret r&d facilities at Manticore B. It’s also possible they didn’t have enough Keyhole 2s for all the wallers.
They then start retooling the main production lines during the cease fire. Or probably more accurately, they start to set up many more addtional production lines for an eventual upgrade of their entire capital missile inventory.
If you think about it, it’s unlikey Manticore maintains a production capability of tens of thousands of pods every month. The expenditure just isn’t there. We could try to come up with accurate figures from WoH and AAC, but it doubt the RMN used more than a couple hundred thousand missiles during the second war.
This means they’re probably way over-stocked as far as conventional pods go anyway and don’t really need to produce more than a couple thousand pods every month.
And if this is true, this could be one reason why ramping up Apollo production took a fair amount of time and missiles weren’t comming of the line in great numbers until after the talks collapsed and Eighth Fleet departed for Solon.
Also keep in mind – they still would want to maintain a at leask token production capability of conventional missile pods. Most of the fleet wasn’t Apollo capable afterall. Another factor, since they felt the need to test Apollo, they might not commit fully to full scale Apollo production until after they get back results from Lovat. I don’t think that would be particularly smart, but who knows at this point.
In any case, the situation would change drastically after Lovat, but one could still convincingly argue that they only had enough Apollo pods ready to reload Eighth Fleet when it got back in June.
If we assume 1000 pods on average for 15 Apollo wallers in Eighth Fleet that‘s 15.000 for a complete loadout. If we assume Eighth Fleet used 5.000 Apollo pods at Lovat (they had to hit the fixed defenses too, right?) that a rough 20.000 Apollo pods to load the original wall of Eighth Fleet.
Additional Apollo pods produced in June / July would have been used for the 35+ IAN wallers completing the refit. If we assume some 500 pods (?) for IAN SDPs, that’s a planned 20.000 for just one complete loadout.
Additional production capacity would have gone to producing system defense Apollos. They were very likley looking to deploy them in similar numbers in Manticore B, Manticre A and at the Junction.
So very roughly speaking, we’re looking at some 80.000 Apollo pods being produced until September just to complete the load out of Eighth Fleet for Jouett and to properly defend the Manticore system.
If we assume (again very roughly) they started Apollo production at the beginning of 1921, that’s basically 10.000 Apollo pods per month on average. Tall order in my book.
A wild assed guess could look something like this:
January: 100 pods produced /inital LIRP at Weyland
February: 1000 pods produced /first full rate production line set up
March: 1500 pods produced /retooling starts in earnest, lessons learned from inital production line are incoporated
April: 2500 pods produced / production ramps up and Eight fleet leaves with about 5k Apollo pods
May: 5000 pods produced /production is well set up to double every month
June: 10.000 pods produced / enough pods have been produced to completley restock Eight Fleet
July: 20.000 pods produced / barely enough produced to load the IAN wallers and start deploying system defense pods
August 40.000 pods produced / enlarged Eighth fleet fully stocked, full rollout of Apollo system defense. The window of vulnerability has closed.
September 80.000 pods produced / all immideate demands met, stockpiles can be set up and ammunition supply ships can be restocked, an offensive against Haven system is possible.
I’m not married to those numbers, but probably in the general ballpark.
Well, you wouldn't de-escalate and attack something less important than Lovat. You'd have to go for a bigger target. Whether that's Haven itself or not we don't know. I wouldn't call that pointless.
You just don’t need to attack before the window of vulnerability has been closed. The attack on Lovat in May was pointless, Manticore could have waited till August or September, hit Lovat or Jouett and immediately go for Haven next, winning the war.
This is also the reason why Eighth Fleet didn’t hit another target immideatly after restocking in June. They finally realized what was in the cards for them and decided to build up Eighth into a fighting force capable of ending the war.
They still would have gone for Jouett (are much tougher target than Lovat as they say) but there’s no reason to assume the target after that woudln’t have been Haven. I think Jouett is pointless too, but even Manticore realized another Lovat would give them nothing.
They didn't they they were vulnerable. Couple that with retaining the initiative on the war and you can see why they went back on the attack.
Yeah well, case in point, they are morons then. Of course they were vulnerable. One just needs to look at the relative force levels to realize this.
Even if they are arrogantly assuming their raiding is the sole reason for Theismans inaction, there’s also the concept of diminishing returns. They have very little reason to assume that Theisman will continue to waste his ever increasing wall to guard Republican systems. At some point he’ll get fed up with it and realize, the best way to defend against those deep raids ist o take Trevors Star.
Not that they were thinking about any of this.