ArmySGT. wrote:VFs are going to have "short legs" for space patrol....[...]
Um... says who?
To date, the only VF in all of
Robotech that has ever been asserted to have "short legs" in space flight is the VF/A-6 Alpha fighter. Understandably so, as the fighter's design is extremely compact and what limited internal space hasn't been given over to engines and other flight-vital systems is occupied by micro-ordinance. Part of this is, naturally, down to the role the original show put the Legioss in... that of a short-range, orbit-to-surface fighter platform. The same doesn't hold true for the VF-1, for example, which is going into it with ~4x the tank capacity of an Alpha, and also boasts FAST packs and other options to increase its propellant capacity significantly*. Even without them, the VF-1 was depicted as having pretty impressive range in space, e.g. the Battle of Saturn's Rings, and should be more than suitable for space patrol use. After all, the Beta's supposed to be a long-range space fighter-bomber and the VF-1's got more tank space than that as well.
* OSM specs for the version of the VF-1 Valkyrie's FAST pack seen in the original Macross series and, as a result, Robotech as well, boosts the VF-1's fuel load by 4.56x (not counting the fuel allocation for the dorsal rocket boosters). Other additional hardware mentioned includes a fuel bladder system that could be installed in the sub-intakes and main intakes behind the protective cover, and Option Pack choices that include additional tanks of propellant for the dorsal rocket boosters.
In fact, the VF-1 is OSM-ly perfectly capable as a space patrol craft... which means it's a safe bet that Robotech would also consider it a viable patrol option. The Lost Two Years, a story in the Macross: Perfect Memory artbook, indicates that Hikaru (Rick) actually spent the timeskip between Ep27 and Ep28 serving as a space patrol flight leader, operating out of a base on the the moon.ArmySGT. wrote:A corvette gives enough wiggle room that a pilot and co-pilot have a toilet, and limited food and drink for long sorties. Your VF is only going to be good for up to eight hours.... Four hours out and four hours back.
While I don't deny that a larger plane offers some significant advantages for long-term patrols, is one really necessary for post-war Earth? Both in the RPG and the series, post-war humanity had the
Star Trek-style generic sensor systems which boasted extremely long ranges and considerable precision (barring jamming), effectively eliminating the need to put together a dedicated recon flight.
Robotech greatly expanded the time it takes to travel between planets or moons without a fold jump, which means that trying to fly a short-range craft like a Gnerl out to Mars or Saturn would take FAR longer than a day and a half. If you've got a fold-capable ship out there deploying them, why not leverage the far more powerful sensor systems of the ship, or deploy multiple, shorter-ranged recon flights to cover more area in less time?
ArmySGT. wrote:Allows the GM to have all the players in one boat if you want to run an escape scenario, or other situation when it would be easier (or more plausible) for a accident or situation to affect one ship and not 4-6 VFs.
Isn't that what we have small ships like
Garfish-class transporters and
Horizon-class shuttles for?
(In theory, you can get as many as five VFs on a single Horizon-T... four in the cargo pods, and one on the ventral hull.)
ArmySGT. wrote:A converted team of Gnerls can go have a look at anomalous sensor contacts. A Gnerl corvette can be on escort duty protecting supplies moving out system to Space Station Liberty, IO, or any research platforms or listening stations.
As I said above, the distances and travel times involved in interplanetary sublight transit in
Robotech would mean an escort detail like that would be impractical. The only way to cover distances like that quickly and effectively (meaning: a way that doesn't involve a trip that's five months one-way) is by fold jump, which invalidates the need for escort fighters capable of long-range transit. Any installation that's close enough to make a sublight trip in a reasonable amount of time (pretty much distances of one light-second or less, so Earth to Earth-orbit or the moon) without resorting to fold jumping would be well within the known capabilities of the VFs in the series... arguably even the Alpha.
ArmySGT. wrote:Bolt on external hardpoints and converted Gnerls are the heavy hitter strike platform to be protected by VFs..... Rebuild one as an Elint or Wild Weasel platform.
There's not much room in the Gnerl's airframe for ordinance, and with nobody but humans using radar platforms and SAMs, the Wild Weasel role pretty much doesn't exist anymore. Looking at it, there's not really anywhere you could safely put a hardpoint on the Gnerl... its hull is liberally peppered with high-thrust vernier ports and its six missile launchers. Going for the ventral hull isn't an option, since that'd get in the way of the landing skids, verniers, and existing launchers. A Gnerl isn't even a lifting body, it flies on raw, vectored thrust alone... so adding significant extra weight would really be taking your life into your hands.
ArmySGT. wrote:Use one as a clandestine insertion craft...... It moves in close to a still loyal Zentraedi vessel and deploys micronian military specialists that are going to tag the hull with transponders, tap the long range communications, interstellar communications, and possibly sabotage systems like the fold drive.
As far as we're aware, both OSM-ly and in
Robotech, the long-range/FTL communications, sensors, etc. are part of a ship's fold drive... and the only ships in
Robotech with their fold systems on or near the outer hull are those built by humans: the
Garfish and
Ikazuchi-class ships.