I enjoyed the lore surrounding the design though, how the gravity wave tech is used to create shields that are unfortunately less strong on the sides of the ship. This of course leads to great Horatio Hornblower style naval broadside battles. And I really dig the driven-by-war improvements in technology, specifically missiles.
A similar space-navy-sci-fi series is the Lost Fleet series by Jack Campbell (pen name of John G Hemry, retired US Navy). First book is called Dauntless, and I highly, seriously highly recommend everyone read the whole series: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/112292.Dauntless
They look like merge between a capsule and a dumbbell. Could you describe which direction does they generally move. I see that the weapons array seem to be on a longer side. What function do the wider parts on ends are for, propulsion?
The ship moves to the left in this image, longways. The ghostly fields surrounding the ship both provide reactionless drive and protect the ship from most incoming laser and missile fire. Forcefields of course work by writers fiat, but in the stories it works out that a "down the throat" or "up the tailpipe" missile shot is a killshot.
This has the effect of making "crossing the T" as in olden sailing days (giving a broadside to the nose) is still effective in 3D space combat.
The larger parts on either end are primarily just heavy armor.
They move along their length. Typically the end with the larger bulb is the front I believe, but many ships have equally sized bulbs.
Propulsion is provided by gravity generators built in a ring encircling either end of the craft.
In normal space the ship forms two planes of intense gravitational gradient above and below the ship in a wedge shape, which has the effect of moving the ship forward. For reasons that I suspect have some grounding in actual physics (?) The wedges need to be open at either end to actually move the ship forward.
The two planes have such intense gravity that literally nothing (including missles, lasers, visible light, etc.) can get through. The sides of the ship can be protected with weaker "side wall" gravitational planes, but not at the strength of the primary planes or it will interfer with propulsion.
All of this has the effect of making space battles similar to ocean battles with broadsides of missiles (which can get through the side walls) and lots of emphasis on maneuvering to bring your ship's broadside in line with the other ships unprotected "throat" or "kilt".
Which brings it right back to the bulbs on either end which are the heaviest armored parts of the ship because they are not protected by powerful gravitational planes.
Civilian ships taper at the ends instead of flaring since they don't need the armor or powerful sensors that military craft put there.
(As an aside, the honorverse hyperspace has currents of gravity. When in hyperspace the gravity generators on a ship create Warshawski Sails - massive km wide planes of gravity which catch the currents to move the ship much faster than possible in normal space.)
These ships move longways, with the bulbous ends in front and back. However, they maneuver differently in battle, as their armaments are primarily on their sides, akin to 18th century frigates and galleons.
The Warshawski sails are a fascinating bit of tech. You can read about them here:
I enjoyed the lore surrounding the design though, how the gravity wave tech is used to create shields that are unfortunately less strong on the sides of the ship. This of course leads to great Horatio Hornblower style naval broadside battles. And I really dig the driven-by-war improvements in technology, specifically missiles.
A similar space-navy-sci-fi series is the Lost Fleet series by Jack Campbell (pen name of John G Hemry, retired US Navy). First book is called Dauntless, and I highly, seriously highly recommend everyone read the whole series: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/112292.Dauntless