That rocket pod is a very basic system. To defeat drones, you need a micromissile with LOAL. Without LOAL, you need this turret, but it is still not a replacement for VLS.
They have actually designed the turret for the other weapons.
Basically, what I'm trying to say is our ships would need this turret as well as the Bhargavastra VLS.
Bhargavastra's ground version has it's own standalone EOIR/FCR mounted on the truck. On a ship, it's possible we can integrate it with the ship's EO/radar systems for guidance but if it turns out a co-located fire control system is best for anti-drone launches, then a swivel mount will be optimal.
We'll see how it goes.
Swarm drones won't give you the liberty of engaging from long range. Many will not just make it close, but actually hit the ship.
In fact, over water, missiles and drones can fly lower than over terrain.
If you're integrated with the ship's main FCR, you'll always seen them coming much sooner than a ground launcher ever could.
No terrain so the horizon is the only limitation. Ship's radars are mounted much higher than the truck's radar. It's just physics.
Regardless of reorientation, micromissiles will perform better because they can be launched much earlier. And when using gravity-assist, they become more accurate than swivel launch. It's easier to hit a maneuvering target from above (high RCS) than straight forward (low RCS).
VLS pop-up won't be high enough to make a difference. If the micromissile has to attain altitude, it'll have to do it under its own power in either case. But in the case of VLS, it'll have to spend some power on reorienting as well, so it's a double whammy on kinematics.
But against drones, you need very high end-game performance
That argument supports the trainable launcher option. You retain kinetic performance for a longer period as you don't expend any of it on initial orientation.
That argument supports a VLS. Swivel launcher comes at the cost of space. On our ships, you gotta replace CIWS with a swivel launcher.
Depends on the footprint & how big of a launcher you want. You don't necessarily have to go with the full 64-round pack.
Regardless, there's many more spots for a trainable mount as you only have to worry about above-deck space. For a VLS, you have to worry about both above-deck & below-deck space. So the number of options will inherently be fewer. No way around it.
But with VLS, you can start cutting the hull wherever you have already made space for future enhancement.
As I said, that would mean you're installing this capability at the expense of additional land-attack/point-defence/area-defence capability (which is ostensibly what those spaces were made for considering anti-swarm wasn't what anyone had in mind back then).
And the Bhargavastra VLS is so small that you can find more imaginative ways to do it without placing the deck at risk.
US Company Lockheed Martin displayed a deck-mounted vertical launcher for AGM-114L Hellfire/AGM-179 JAGM missiles intended for warships on a scaled model.
turdef.com
A launcher like this basically has the same footprint as a swivel/trainable mount...and all the same drawbacks (big, obvious target), but none of the benefits (you still have to spend energy on reorientation). So it's kinda the worst of both worlds.
Anyway, let's just wait to see how we do it. As of now even the ground version of Bhargavastra isn't ready...which means even the 64-cell launcher with standalone FCS that we're seeing now may not be how it finally turns out.