Dewey
Type: Destroyer
Producer: Dassault-Shimon
In class: 24 with the SLDF and 2 with the RWR at its height
In service: 2760

Mass: 600,000
Sail Integrity: 4
Thrust: 4/6
Fuel: 4000 tons
Structural Integrity: 60
Armor: 720 tons of standard armor (48+6 each facing)

Docking Collars: 0
Fighters: 18
Small Craft: 4
Crew: 160
Lifeboats: 10
Escape Pods: 10
Grav Decks: 1 60 meter
Cargo: 46,831

Bay 1: Small Craft (4) 2 doors
Bay 2: Fighters (18) 6 doors
Bay 3: Cargo (46,831) 2 doors

Other equipment
none


Weapons:
Heatsinks: 3120 (enough)

Forward
5 Naval Laser 45s

Fore Left/Fore Right
5 Naval Laser 45s
3 Maelstrom AR 10s

Left Broadside/Right Broadside
4 Naval Autocannon 25s
3 Maelstrom AR 10s

Aft Left/Aft Right
4 Naval Autocannon 25s
3 Maelstrom AR 10s

Aft
5 Naval Laser 45s


Ammo
1000 tons of Naval Autocannon ammo
180 White Shark
180 Killer Whale
180 Barracuda


Overview

The Dewey was concieved as a supplement and eventual replacement for the 
venerable Lola III. Though even the oldest Lolas were still less than a 
hundred years old when the first Dewey was launched, plans were made to begin 
retiring the Lola III by 2862, and it was decided that rather than begin a 
crash program to construct a replacement when the Lola III began going out of 
service, the League would instead begin a slow process of building 
replacement ships early on. Though the long term cost would be the same, the 
imediate impact on the military budget would be greatly lessened.

Though this program was ultimately enacted, it did have its critics. Because 
small numbers of Deweys would be built as long as a hunded years in advance, 
many pointed out that the first Dewey class ships would be through half of 
their projected service life by the time that they actually started replacing 
the Lola III, which would just necessitate their early replacement as well. 
Others believed that this "preparadness in advance" program was actually just 
a cynical attempt by the SLDF to expand its strength in order to keep ahead 
of the member states. Their biggest evidence for this is the fact, admitted 
by the SLDF, that the Lola III's service life could be extended for centuries 
beyond the projected two hundred years "if the need was felt". To those who 
opposed the SLDF's buildup, this meant that the SLDF could, and probably 
would, just forget about retiring the Lola when the time came, effectively 
increasing their destroyer fleet by a third, four hundred ships, and further 
tightening their hold on their military supremacy.

Another complaint had to do with the company tasked with construction of the 
Dewey. Dassault-Shimon had previously been responsible for the debacle with 
the Cameron, and as a result, did not have a very good reputation. On the 
other hand, the company had been nationalized by the Star League government 
after the affair with the Cameron, which gave the SLDF unprecedented control 
over the Dewey's design. Furthermore, government control of Dassault-Shimon 
allowed the SLDF to ensure that they could get the ship for the lowest 
possible price, at least in theory.

The biggest complaint of all, and the most prophetic, was that this plan 
opperated on an enormously long timescale and made the very dangerous 
assumption that the Inner Sphere would be the same in a hundred years. In 
truth, only five years after the launching of the Dewey, everything changed 
radically when seventeen worlds in the Periphery rebelled against the Star 
League government. As the bulk of the SLDF moved to crush this uprising, 
Stephen Amaris made his move.


Capabilities:

Because it was meant to eventually replace the Lola III, the smaller Dewey 
was designed along similar lines, in most regards matching the older ship's 
performance fairly well.

In terms of firepower, the Dewey was one of the most heavily armed destroyers 
of its time. Sixteen class twenty five naval autocannons make up the core of 
the ship's arsenal, providing a volume of fire sufficient to threaten 
practically anything larger than an aerofighter. Originally, however, there 
was some controversy about using class twenty five guns. The NAC 25 was not a 
particularly widely used weapon, and as a result there were few sources of 
ammunition for it. In preparation for the Dewey's eventual status as a front 
line destroyer, a number of ammunition factories had to be retooled to turn 
out class 25 ammunition.

The ship's secondary armament is twenty medium naval lasers. These guns 
provide the Dewey's principle frontal firepower, and much like the Lola III, 
they are not enough to do more than harrass a large opponent.

Backing up the lasers is a large battery of Maelstrom AR-10s. The eighteen 
missile tubes are an unusually large battery for a destroyer, but combined 
with the integral fighter wing, they give the ship an excelent anti-fighter 
capability compared to other escorts. It was not uncommon for fleet 
commanders to use their Deweys as AA ships, opperating one or two hundred 
kilometers out ahead of the main fleet and engaging hostile fighters before 
they could close in to effective attack range.

The Dewey's biggest weakness, and its most controversial aspect, is its light 
armor. Because the SLDF wanted an inexpensive escort ship, Dassault-Shimon 
did not include advanced armor in their design. Though the Dewey carried 
physically heavier armor than similar designs like the Essex, the standard 
plate did not provide as much protection as most naval officers would have 
liked out of a modern warship. Despite these concerns, the high command 
approved the Dewey as is, stipulating only that more advanced armor might be 
fitted later on "should it prove beneficial".


Deployment:

Dassault-Shimon constructed four Deweys a year for six years before the 
Amaris Coup ended production. Despite the fears of another Cameron fiasco, or 
perhaps because of them, the Dewey soon proved to be an excellent escort 
ship. Unfortunately, Amaris' forces were able to gain control of two Deweys 
when they siezed the Dassault-Shimon yards. These ships, the Sullivans and 
Spruance, had just been completed and were waiting for their trials crew when 
the Coup struck. The Spruance was destroyed at Nusakan during the SLDF 
assault against that world, while the Sullivans remains unnacounted for to 
this day. Rumors that circulated after the war maintain that the destroyer 
was sent by Amaris to hunt down the cruiser Oktyabrskava Revolutsiva (October 
Revolution) after that ship deserted Terra, though there is no way to confirm 
this, and official star league records maintain the Sullivans was probably 
destroyed by sabotage.

Two other Deweys nearing completion at the Dassault Shimon yards, the Gearing 
and Kinkaid, were also siezed by Amaris. Though Rim Worlds forces continued 
work on both ships, partisan activities created no end of delays. In the end, 
the Gearing was destroyed in its construction slip. The Kinkaid was captured 
intact and nearly finished by the SLDF, and accompanied the Exodus, along 
with four other surviving Deweys, the Dewey, Worden, Hull, and Macdonough. As 
near as could be determined, all five ships were mothballed when the fleet 
reached the Pentagon. It is not known how many of these ships survived the 
Exodus civil war that followed, though there is some indication that the 
Kinkaid at least did end up as part of a clan fleet. Though there are no 
official records left, there are some bits of evidence scattered in the 
Rememberance and other sources that seem to indicate that at least the 
Kinkaid and possibly the other Deweys ended up in the fleet of Clan 
Wolverine. If this is true, they were almost certainly destroyed during the 
Trial of Anihilation.

    Source: geocities.com/master_sun2000