Mogami

Type: Light Cruiser
Introduction: 2725?

Mass: 700,000
Sail Integrity: 4
Thrust: 4/6
Fuel: 10,000 tons
Structural Integrity: 90
Armor: 1260 tons of standard armor (504, 84+9 per facing)

Docking Collars: 0
Fighters: 36
Small Craft: 2
Crew: 300
Lifeboats: 15
Escape Pods: 0
Grav Decks: none
Cargo: 36,000

Bay 1: Fighters (36) 6 doors
Bay 2: Cargo (36,000) 2 doors
Bay 3: Small Craft (2) 1 door

Weapons:

Fwd
8 Naval Laser 45s
5 Large Lasers

FL/FR
15 Naval Laser 45s
5 Large Lasers

LBS/ RBS
15 Naval Laser 45s
5 Large Lasers

AL/AR
15 Naval Laser 45s
5 Large Lasers

Aft
5 Large Lasers


Overview:

Though not particularly prevelant in the DCMS fleet during the days of the 
Star League or the succesion wars, the Mogami class light cruiser has 
nevertheless earned its own niche in history, simply because of its secrecy 
clouded past.

There were actually at least five seperate Mogami classes. Officially, the 
Draconis Combine deployed only five Mogami class ships, the Mogami, Kuma, 
Asashio, Nadashio, and Natori. Historical records from the first succesion 
war, however, indicate that these five ships (each of which had significant 
structural differences from one another, indicating they were built at 
different yards) were actually the lead ships for a whole series of light 
cruiser. Just from confirmed sightings during the succession wars we know 
there were at least four Mogamis, three Nadashios, three Kumas, half a dozen 
Asashios, and two Natoris (the two Natoris in particular are confirmed 
because they both appeared at the battle of Cholame at the same time), 
despite claims by Takiro and later Minoru Kurita that they had only ever 
built five ships.

The official date of the Mogami's launching was in mid 2755, barely two 
months after the star league council passed a resolution allowing the great 
houses to double the size of their private armies. However, careful study of 
records from the era do not support this assumption, and despite the official 
story being that all five ships were built at Chatham, there is no indication 
whatsoever that the Combine has ever built Mogami class ships there. Careful 
analysis of freighter traffic (specifically freighters carrying parts needed 
for warships) seems to indicate that construction of the Mogami and her 
sisters took place at at least five seperate shipyards as early as 2725, 
thirty years before their official entry into the DCA, and that at least 
forty ships of this type were constructed.

The Mogami was therefore in essence an illeagle warship, built secretely in 
violation of star league edicts regarding the size of private house armies. 
This in itself is no big deal. EVERY great house did at least some stretching 
or outright breaking of the rules when it came to the strength of their 
private armies, especially when it became apparent that the league was 
crumbling. What makes the Mogami unique is the excessive lengths to which 
this secret was kept (to this day the Combine only admits to building 
eighteen Mogamis, and they maintain that none of them were built before 
2755), and the fact that this ship was built specifically to fight the first 
succesion war.

This conclusion becomes inescapable when one examines the Mogami closely. In 
the first case, the ship is dirt cheap. No lithium fusion battery, no docking 
collars, no fancy armor, not even a grav deck. The weaponry, a massed battery 
of nearly a hundred naval lasers and forty large lasers, provides reasonable 
firepower at the lowest posible price.

In the second case, the ship requires very little in the way of logistical 
support. It carries ten thousand tons of fuel, along with enough supplies to 
keep operating for a year, and most important of all, does not require 
ammunition resupply.

In the third case, the ship can be operated by pratically anyone. The control 
systems are extremely simple and reliable, meaning that an undertrained crew 
will be able to control their ship fairly well.

If we take these three things into account, we end up with a relatively cheap 
ship that can be fueled once, staffed with green recruits, and sent off to 
battle. Thanks to its weaponry and armor protection, a Mogami might even be 
expected to last long enough for its replacement to be completed and a new 
crew trained. The ship is therefore ideal for the bloody ship killing fights 
that all out war in the inner sphere would entail. Despite this, even the 
Mogami would not last through the succession wars. Forty Mogamis were 
confirmed destroyed during the first and second succession wars (the Combine, 
of course, only admits to eighteen), and all five of the shipyards where they 
were built were destroyed. This would be the end of it, if not for persistent 
rumors that a sixth shipyard exists somewhere. These stories began just on 
the vague assumption that there might just be a hidden shipyard somewhere to 
build this secret warship, and have since snowballed into possibly the most 
holy of holy grails for some of the more fringe lostech prospectors. In many 
bars along the coreward edge of Combine space, you can find a lostech 
prospector who's willing to tell the whole story of the Kurama Shipyard (or 
Hie or Marat or another name used by one of the other hundred legends 
surounding this most likely none existant place). The original percieved 
purpose of the facility is hardly ever remembered anymore. The prospectors 
will tell you how the Combine was researching a new power system called the 
phase transistion engine, or how it was where an incredibly powerful energy 
weapon was being developed capable of destroying entire planets, or where 
dealings with a transdimensional alien race broke down, resulting in the 
first succesion war... The list is endless. A few prospectors might even 
believe there's a shipyard out there that used to build light cruisers.

The evidence for all these theories is of course non existant, and ninety 
nine percent of them are utterly ridiculous anyway. Nevertheless, a 
significant number of prospectors have scoured the coreward edge of the 
Combine (why would it be there, specifically, anyway?) looking for something, 
even if it is just a purpose to their own pathetic lives.

That being said, there is of course the posibility that there are additional 
Mogamis floating around somewhere. It is not known how many of this class 
were actually built, but the shear amount of time between 2725 (when the 
first one was believed to have been built) and the start of the first 
succesion war suggests that there was plentiful time to produce a large 
number of these ships, especially at five different shipyards. It is possible 
that a few of these ships were mothballed, waiting to be utilized, and just 
forgotten. Of course it is also possible that a sixth shipyard actually does 
exist. In both cases, there is no evidence to support either assumption.

    Source: geocities.com/master_sun2000