Loren Pechtel wrote:Has decided, or hasn't considered that MDMs given a full run hit so hard that attempting to ram is a good idea.
No "or" to be had here, really. Old style "contact" nukes have been repeatedly described as detonating only if they could not make physical contact with the target after penetrating the sidewall. This sort of attack by ramming was an included feature in early missile designs and then dropped from laser head designs. That has to be a conscious decision.
My speculation is that the physical hardware for penetrating a sidewall had to be given up to make room for the laser head hardware, on the theory that missiles that do
relatively moderate but consistent damage are better than missiles that do absolutely devastating damage the one time in a trillion they get hull contact at max velocity. Absent that penetration hardware, physical matter gets shredded by the sidewall so at most you'd get a relatively diffuse high-speed plasma spray against your hull from a non-penetrating missile strike.
Outside of Oyster Bay's missile attacks on stationary targets I don't believe we've ever seen a ship-to-ship missile make hull contact like that. ThinksMarkedly's post is a good explanation of why that is.
On the plus side, I can think of one very good reason to program Apollo control missiles and EW missiles to try to ram, but it has nothing to do with the damage they could do to the target. It's an absolutely foolproof way of insuring their total destruction so no one could possibly recover and reverse engineer them. Unlikely to be necessary for several reasons, but if you absolutely positively have to be sure, that's how you'd do it.