ELTEE
Vice Admiral
So everyone yell at me when I get this all wrong...
I'm trying to see if I can oversimplify the trends in naval design that the Confederation follows before, during, and after the war with the Kilrathi.
Before: Emphasis is on *battleships* with decisive battles being fought ship to ship in massive fleet on fleet engagements. Fighters and some light carriers exist, but play a recon role for the most part.
During: As fighters, carriers, and their weapons progress (i.e. better torpedoes, missiles and guns) they take on a greater role, eventually becoming the cornerstone to any fleet. In addition, as the range and effectiveness of the fighters progress, they operate more independently than before. Ex: A carrier like Tiger's Claw and her spacewing can penetrate enemy space and do the damage that a group of battleships could do before (while making it hard to be detected as well).
After: As the power of capital ship design increases and the economic attitudes change, the Confederation arrives at a compromise of the previous two trends. Emphasis is on fewer, more powerful ships (think Yamato) that are built to better withstand attack from fighters. Result? Carriers like Midway and battlecruisers, which in essence at least attempts to replace both battleships and fleets of escort ships like destroyers and cruisers.
Whew. So what does everyone think? On to something here, or just plain wrong? Note that these are supposed to be oversimplified. Obviously the trends partially mix at all times (i.e. Confederation dreadnought)
Also, not sure how to incorporate the supercruisers into this...maybe they are a halfway point between *battleships* and attack carriers...???

I'm trying to see if I can oversimplify the trends in naval design that the Confederation follows before, during, and after the war with the Kilrathi.
Before: Emphasis is on *battleships* with decisive battles being fought ship to ship in massive fleet on fleet engagements. Fighters and some light carriers exist, but play a recon role for the most part.
During: As fighters, carriers, and their weapons progress (i.e. better torpedoes, missiles and guns) they take on a greater role, eventually becoming the cornerstone to any fleet. In addition, as the range and effectiveness of the fighters progress, they operate more independently than before. Ex: A carrier like Tiger's Claw and her spacewing can penetrate enemy space and do the damage that a group of battleships could do before (while making it hard to be detected as well).
After: As the power of capital ship design increases and the economic attitudes change, the Confederation arrives at a compromise of the previous two trends. Emphasis is on fewer, more powerful ships (think Yamato) that are built to better withstand attack from fighters. Result? Carriers like Midway and battlecruisers, which in essence at least attempts to replace both battleships and fleets of escort ships like destroyers and cruisers.
Whew. So what does everyone think? On to something here, or just plain wrong? Note that these are supposed to be oversimplified. Obviously the trends partially mix at all times (i.e. Confederation dreadnought)
Also, not sure how to incorporate the supercruisers into this...maybe they are a halfway point between *battleships* and attack carriers...???
The 4 AMGs of the Concordia class SCs is the same heavy armament of the later Waterloo class cruisers.
) operate as battlegroups (witness the Victory's escort of a CA and 2 DDs; the Lexington in WC4 also had escorts, as per WC4N, but left them behind on the attack that let Blair get in a mission kill on it, thanks to Paulsen's incompetence).