AnotherDilbert
SOC-14 1K
Design brief: A set of standard small craft that can easily be incorporated into deck plans and stored aboard.
The idea is that all standard small craft have the same cross-section, so can fit into the same docking rings, hangars, and launch tubes. Airlocks and hatches are in standard positions. They only differ in length.
They are long slabs with rounded edges and a rounded nose. They are all 2.9 m tall, to fit into a single deck aboard ship, and 7.4 m wide, to fit into a 7.5 m (5 square) wide hangar. The cross-section is about 19.2 m2, so each 10 Dt of craft is 5 squares.
Airlocks are left and right, 3 m from the bow. Cargo hatches a few metre aft of that. Additional iris valves, without airlocks, in the centre of the bow and stern makes them stackable lengthwise. Emergency hatches up and down from the airlock.
Due to the iris valve in the centre of the bow, the bridge is offset to the left and offers a glassteel bubble with a good view except to the right and aft.
The sides are rounded, so side-mounted iris valves are covered by rounded hatches that slides into the hull and rear-wards. Cargo hatches work similarly. Nothing can protrude from the craft as it must fit into a specified docking tube. Some craft have rear cargo hatches that extend outwards, they can only be used when there is plenty of space.
Overview:

The idea is that all standard small craft have the same cross-section, so can fit into the same docking rings, hangars, and launch tubes. Airlocks and hatches are in standard positions. They only differ in length.
They are long slabs with rounded edges and a rounded nose. They are all 2.9 m tall, to fit into a single deck aboard ship, and 7.4 m wide, to fit into a 7.5 m (5 square) wide hangar. The cross-section is about 19.2 m2, so each 10 Dt of craft is 5 squares.
Airlocks are left and right, 3 m from the bow. Cargo hatches a few metre aft of that. Additional iris valves, without airlocks, in the centre of the bow and stern makes them stackable lengthwise. Emergency hatches up and down from the airlock.
Due to the iris valve in the centre of the bow, the bridge is offset to the left and offers a glassteel bubble with a good view except to the right and aft.
The sides are rounded, so side-mounted iris valves are covered by rounded hatches that slides into the hull and rear-wards. Cargo hatches work similarly. Nothing can protrude from the craft as it must fit into a specified docking tube. Some craft have rear cargo hatches that extend outwards, they can only be used when there is plenty of space.
Overview:
