ThinksMarkedly wrote:I don't remember Loreleis against Raging Justice. Maybe my memory is faulty here. I do remember freighters pretending to be SDs deeper into the system, though.
[snip]Jonathan_S wrote:Still, trying to use them to explain away a sting of pre-deployed pods seems like it's going to fall apart shortly after the enemy returns fire. Those "cruisers" can't simply disappear, nor can they outrun the return fire -- but their illusion will collapse when they seem to sit there fat, dumb, and happy to be blown apart by Cataphracts without firing a single CM or PDLC in defense.
True, but if you've managed to force a salvo towards those decoys -- particularly if that's an alpha strike -- you should consider that a win. Forcing the enemy to spend their best shot away from you is good tactics.
I now think this is plausible, or at least was in the war against the SL. Against Haven or when the tech gap shrinks, probably not.
First I agree that using Loreleis + pods to trick an enemy into wasting their first salvo is a useful trick if the situation allows -- and might even work against Haven if you could set conditions up correctly. (After all their RD's aren't anywhere near as capable as Manticores -- so you might well temporarily convince them that you've lured them into an ambush by another formation; at least for long enough for them to reflexively return fire)
I was only saying that trying to repeat the same trick multiple times in the same engagement is unlikely to keep fooling the enemy. (Though now that I say it I guess you could try to take advantage of that and set up 3 or 4 'fake' squadrons of Loreleis + pods in a row then place your real squadron plus pods at the end of it -- might let you get a 2nd salvo off before the enemy realizes you're not another decoy and actually returns fire. Plus of course they've almost certainly wasted at least one pod salvo on your decoys)
As for Loreleis during Raging Justice - I went and took a quick look. They do appear to have been used; but not the way I remembered. They seem to have been used as pure missile bait; not as part of the pre-combat attempt to intimidate and deter the SLN.
A Rising Thunder wrote:Five minutes wasn’t much time to be making changes, yet if the Sollies’ missile acceleration exceeded projections by this much, there was no telling how much better their targeting systems and penaids might be as well.
I think “a lot” is probably a pretty fair estimate, she thought tartly. Which suggests—
“It looks like we’re going to have leakers, Andrea. Get the Loreleis deployed. It seems we’re going to find out how well they work after all.”
“Deploying Lorelei, aye, Your Grace!”
Also here's the bit that I think I'd been misremembering -- I'd remembered the entire fake squadrons but was remembered incorrectly about when they'd been activated.
A Rising Thunder wrote:Conceptually, Lorelei was light-years beyond Halo. Powered with the same onboard fusion technology the RMN had developed for Ghost Rider, the Mark 23, and the Mark 16, the Lorelei platforms had independent energy budgets beyond the dreams of any Solarian designer. They needed no line of sight for broadcast power to drive their powerful EW systems, and their onboard AI was even better than the Mark 23-E’s.
Halo provided false targets to confuse an incoming missile, but those lures had to be relatively close to the missile’s actual target, and even with broadcast power available, Halo’s false targets were significantly weaker—dimmer—than a ship-of-the-wall’s actual emissions.
Lorelei didn’t need to be in close proximity to anyone, and its emitters were much more powerful than Halo’s. The false targets Lorelei generated were still far weaker than those of genuine superdreadnoughts, but they could be interposed between those superdreadnoughts and the threat. More, they could be physically separated from the ships they were trying to protect . . . and the signatures they generated had been artfully camouflaged. Yes, they were weaker and dimmer than a true starship might have produced, but what they looked like was an all-up starship using its own EW systems to make its signature as weak and dim as possible.
And, as a final touch, over a third of Andrea Jaruwalski’s Loreleis had been deployed to keep formation on one another as complete, false squadrons of ships-of-the-wall. Squadrons which maneuvered in perfect synchronization with Eighth Fleet’s real squadrons but lay on the threat axis, deliberately exposed to the incoming tsunami of Solarian missiles.
Those missiles took the targets they’d been offered.
Not all of them were spoofed. Not even Lorelei was that good.