From an ambush position, let's be clear about that. In a straight up man fight, things get much dicier for the Sagarmartha in a match against a D6 iirc.We know from text that the Sagamartha was competitive with the D6,
With the budget hawks sabotaging the maneuverability, this thing absolutely needs full phaser coverage.
I want the torpedo launcher as well, but more for science probes than their combat role since torpedo tubes are the standard delivery mechanism for such probes. Torpedoes and probes get used to solve the science problem of the week almost as frequently as the deflector dish does, possibly even more so.
[ ] 6 Phaser Banks, 2 Forward Torpedo Launchers
In the case of this ship, low manuverability combined with how one of the primary expected opponents outside of fleet action is three to five Klingon Birds-of-Prey, mean there are entirely valid concerns about such highly manuverable craft settling into a blind arc and staying there. Particularly the aft, which has less than great coverage for the lesser numbers of phasers. Honestly the"ideal" configuration is honestly probably the four phaser design with a torpedo fore and aft to mitigate that weakness, but the six phaser design is doable, eminently doable, and I am also considering that our next expected opponents are the Klingons. Who both build powerful and dangerous ships like the K'Tinga/D-7, but are likely to be more considering of starting a fight if Starfleet looks strong and powerful- which such a potent ship, which we can produce in numbers thanks to the low cost rating, is part of our fleet's backbone.I just don't understand why people are freaking out so much about having less than 100% coverage. Yes you might miss some shots on small, maneuverable ships. Some shots. They can't evade forever!
That's a very charitable reading of this quote:This ship is very much no longer a light cruiser. That may have been how the project started, but we're well into heavy cruiser territory here. She's going to mass almost the same as the Sagamartha, and have, at the top end, an equivalent average damage output (1 point less). We know from text that the Sagamartha was competitive with the D6, the terrifying Klingon battleship that forced "canon" (very loosely canon, since all that stuff is EU) Starfleet to pump out a bunch of emergency warships. The next heavily armed class we're likely to build is a new explorer, and that can be some ways off, given the Sagamarthas are still perfectly capable and this ship can free them from any internal work, as well as some external work.
There is only one record of them being used in a combat situation, during which the UFS Kilimanjaro ambushed a Klingon D6 cruiser over Archer IV, turning a lopsided confrontation into an even fight that the Kilimanjaro won after sustaining substantial battle damage.
By the QM-provided metrics this makes no sense, costs more than the 6 phaser design in terms of infrastructure but no more effective.[X] 4 Phaser Banks, 2 Forward Torpedo Launchers
75% coverage is Fine Actually.
This ship is very much no longer a light cruiser. That may have been how the project started, but we're well into heavy cruiser territory here. She's going to mass almost the same as the Sagamartha, and have, at the top end, an equivalent average damage output (1 point less). We know from text that the Sagamartha was competitive with the D6, the terrifying Klingon battleship that forced "canon" (very loosely canon, since all that stuff is EU) Starfleet to pump out a bunch of emergency warships. The next heavily armed class we're likely to build is a new explorer, and that can be some ways off, given the Sagamarthas are still perfectly capable and this ship can free them from any internal work, as well as some external work.
Because we don't want these things out being Frontline warships. The design brief and Starfleet's current need is for a better Science vessel that can provide second line combat capabilities. If we turn this into a monster combatant at huge infrastructure cost, then everyone who has a say in anything will demand it be taken off science duty where all that combat potential is wasted and put into Frontline service.The thing is, we were given a brief for a ship which can serve capably as a combatant. This allows us to greatly exceed that brief,...
So the way I look at is is sorta like... why wouldn't we seize that opportunity to get an immense upgrade almost for free? If we build twenty four to eighteen of these things, that's a foundation for Starfleet which gives it a line of battle about as good as it had in canon, before we even build our actual explorer design.
An A- cost and C- infrastructure for a B- tactical rating is hardly an "L". That's an incredible low cost design, that has average impact on our construction capabilities and an above average combat capability. That is a phenomenonal accomplishment by any measure!We can either accept that this will basically not be valid as a 2nd rate combattant, or sacrifice most of the gains made on costs. I don't want to say I told you so but who am I kidding, I told you so.
I think the right option here is to just take the L, admit we failed to make a multirole cruiser and hope there's demand for a non tactical explorer on the cheap, because the infrastructure grade drop for arming this properly to cover for its lack of mobility is enormous.