Not really new several ships have been designed with multiple jumps in the fuel tanks.Meaning designing ships that use multiple Jumps to get to their destination. Like a Slow freighter on a J3 route that takes two jumps to get to there.
I was going to go there, but the idea of combining sequential jumps with compound-fraction Jump Numbers is a novelty.Not really new several ships have been designed with multiple jumps in the fuel tanks.
Yes, I know.. But the idea was for a jump three route and having a ship with drives to finish half of the trip.Not really new several ships have been designed with multiple jumps in the fuel tanks.
Meaning designing ships that use multiple Jumps to get to their destination.
What you're looking for is something called a Spinward X-Courier ...Not really new several ships have been designed with multiple jumps in the fuel tanks.
I think it would have to be J2 drive with fuel for 3, 2+1. (same fuel as 3 J1 or 1 J3, but in between for speed/jump drive size)Yes, I know.. But the idea was for a jump three route and having a ship with drives to finish half of the trip.
Honestly I was Mini Maxing for a route.I think it would have to be J2 drive with fuel for 3, 2+1. (same fuel as 3 J1 or 1 J3, but in between for speed/jump drive size)
Use a collapsible fuel tank so as to be able to "flex" your cargo hold for extra jump range when you need it. You aren't going to be needing more than J2 fuel in the main fuel tanks anyway. For ships that are 500 tons or less, a collapsible fuel tank for J2 fuel is going to 1 ton or less (when not filled with fuel and occupying cargo hold space), which hopefully your ship design can afford.Honestly I was Mini Maxing for a route.
Or in a LBB2-only CT universe, tech level constraints on drive size. This requires allowing direct calculation of drive rating by size and ship tonnage instead of rounding up to the next hull size on the table before calculating.The only reason for a one and a half factor jump drive is to shrink the engine, and save some money.
I've always referred to LBB3 for this (with a preference for .81 over .77) where TL=9 is A-D drives and TL=10 is E-H.TL-9 lets you build drives up to Size F.
Yep...The only reason for a one and a half factor jump drive is to shrink the engine, and save some money.
Good catch. I misread the note I scribbled in the margin there thirty-some years ago.I've always referred to LBB3 for this (with a preference for .81 over .77) where TL=9 is A-D drives and TL=10 is E-H.