The hull might be filled with holes and sagging
what exactly causes "wear and tear" on a space ship? there's no salt, there's not much flexing, the only o2 and humidity is internal.
The hull might be filled with holes and sagging
what exactly causes "wear and tear" on a space ship? there's no salt, there's not much flexing, the only o2 and humidity is internal.
There's constant abrasion from solar and galactic winds, microasteroidal rocks, and constant thermal stress... only one side is heated by the star.
Not to mention wear and tear from flights through atmospheres for streamlined ships
as well as ships that spend time in atmospheres full of corrosive or exotic gasses.
...that don't have to use atmospheric braking...
They don't have to in your setting. Not mine.
Yes, there is.huh. the iss has been up for what, ten years, going bright side / dark side several times a day. hardly a robust structure even by tech 8 standards, any mention of it "wearing out"?
You pressure cycle the hull every time you land on a planet. The outside pressure goes from zero to, well, it can be a lot. You need a minimum of 5 PSI internal for living, so the hull will take most of the flexing.what exactly causes "wear and tear" on a space ship? there's no salt, there's not much flexing, the only o2 and humidity is internal.
You pressure cycle the hull every time you land on a planet ... And you have temperature changes, going from the frozen reaches of space to whatever weather you have at the air port.
yeah, but a heavily used traveller ship might do that maybe 6 times a month. modern passenger liners do that in a day and last two decades, and they're not even tech 9.
Throw in changes in gravitational stress, flexion of the ship (particularly if larger) due to maneuvering and such, wear and tear on the machinery and systems.
All the accumulated issues get to a point where the ship simply isn't worth bringing back up to standard.
neutron embrittlement
Many don't last 40 years. Also, keep in mind transient loading on a wet naval ship seldom exceeds 0.5G, pressure loading seldom exceeds 0.1 bar in condition Z (Fully buttoned up), and the ships making 40 years are getting major overhauls every 4-6 years, including complete hull resurfacing (remove all the paint, check for damage, replace damaged sections, then repaint; paint is actually a sacrificial protectant for the metal).sure those stresses exist, but they're minor in comparison to the stresses faced by an ocean-going ship, and those will last 40 years if cared for at all.
sure. just don't see how any plausible stress load on a space ship can wear it down to that level in 40 years, or 80 for that matter.
heh. I was wondering if anyone would get to that. can't speak to that directly without violating security issues, but suffice to say that in response to neutron embrittlement one does not replace the entire hull.
then have to think solar flares
looks like hydrogen AND cryogenic embrittlement may also be a factor for our ships
The hull of commercial ships will usually outlive their commercial value
evolution of trade or technology make liners optimized for a trade less competitive over time
seems the biggest factor, but imtu fuel tanks are gravity-lined, so the fuel doesn't touch the metal. (actually that's a retro, occurred to me last year and I posted it and said I should get reputations points for the idea, but got negative reputation instead. bummer.)
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