Editing Land-Air BattleMech

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==History==
 
==History==
The origins of the Land-Air 'Mech stem from [[First Lord]] [[Michael Cameron]]'s selection of [[Admiral]] [[David Peterson (27th c.)|David Peterson]] as overall commander of the SLDF. David Peterson instigated a number of sweeping changes to break interservice rivalries and push the [[Terran Hegemony]]'s technological advantage, commissioning several manufacturers to develop "a series of 'Mechs that could fly as well as function as a light ground 'Mech". [[Allied Aerospace]] initially won the bid with a flawed bimodal conversion of the venerable ''[[Shadow Hawk]]'', before [[LexaTech Industries]] delivered the fully functional LAM based on the ''[[Stinger]]'' a decade later. With LexaTech's design becoming the LAM standard, its competitors ([[Harvard Company, Inc.]] and Allied Aerospace) developed similar designs. Despite their names, these Mark I only took small design cues from their progenitor designs, making them easier to single out and target, until a painstaking redesign was undertaken to produce the Mark II version from [[2701]] on.
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The origins of the Land-Air 'Mech stem from [[First Lord]] [[Michael Cameron]]'s selection of [[Admiral]] [[David Peterson]] as overall commander of the SLDF. David Peterson instigated a number of sweeping changes to break interservice rivalries and push the [[Terran Hegemony]]'s technological advantage, commissioning several manufacturers to develop "a series of 'Mechs that could fly as well as function as a light ground 'Mech". [[Allied Aerospace]] initially won the bid with a flawed bimodal conversion of the venerable ''[[Shadow Hawk]]'', before [[LexaTech Industries]] delivered the fully functional LAM based on the ''[[Stinger]]'' a decade later. With LexaTech's design becoming the LAM standard, its competitors ([[Harvard Company, Inc.]] and Allied Aerospace) developed similar designs. Despite their names, these Mark I only took small design cues from their progenitor designs, making them easier to single out and target, until a painstaking redesign was undertaken to produce the Mark II version from [[2701]] on.
  
 
The Land-Air 'Mech is a "jack of all trades and master of none", and became relegated to small highly specific niches. The versatility of the LAM found a place in all SLDF [[division]]s, most notably the League's Striker regiments, where they were typically used as special forces to strike behind enemy lines or disrupt supply lines. The Free Worlds League would possess the second largest number of LAMs by 2750<ref>''Era Report: 2750'', p. 104</ref> and created full battalions for fast strike and rapid response uses. The other Great Houses used LAMs as scouts, utilizing their mobility to enter and leave difficult-to-access locations before being spotted.
 
The Land-Air 'Mech is a "jack of all trades and master of none", and became relegated to small highly specific niches. The versatility of the LAM found a place in all SLDF [[division]]s, most notably the League's Striker regiments, where they were typically used as special forces to strike behind enemy lines or disrupt supply lines. The Free Worlds League would possess the second largest number of LAMs by 2750<ref>''Era Report: 2750'', p. 104</ref> and created full battalions for fast strike and rapid response uses. The other Great Houses used LAMs as scouts, utilizing their mobility to enter and leave difficult-to-access locations before being spotted.

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