Scott Martin
SOC-13
Sigg:
FF&S (1) page 42 requires surface area for jump drives (1 square meter per 3 cubic meters of volume) Presumably this is for a jump grid, so TNE *does* require a jump grid.
I though that T4 retained the TNE fuel requirements: I dumped most of it as a technical archietecture due to sensor issues, so I never actually built a ship with it (I did see that it uses surface area for J-Drives though)
See the below post for an explanation of the design philosophy explanation for "fixing" the 3I capital ships: I bet it's a lot easier to retrofit a jump grid onto a battleship than to build them all 20% oversize... It also (partially) explains the "fashion" in T4, since the "Empire" as described has no peers (or major threats)
__________________________
Bill
My Bad, I need to remember to put <sarcasm> tags in when I'm talking about "dangerous" opponents like the Vargr. I believe that other folks have pointed out how unlikely it would be that the (Tl-12) vargr would pose a significant threat to even the "reserve" (TL-14) IN fleet units in corridor.
My attempted slant for CT was that the higher fuel requirements were "margin" for allowing a ship to jump un-gridded. I also called this a "fad" which made its way into the IN design process as a functional specification required either by some set of Imperial bureacrats who couldn't find a jump drive with it lodged firmly in their... ledger sheet, or by a special interest group (led by say, Archduke Exxon). While this is common in *any* era's administration, it tends to be rampant in the decline of an Empire. In a time of relative "peace" idiots can do this without it having an apparent effeect on actual readiness levels. The rest of your comments are pretty much bang on. "Border Skirmishing" is not the same as "Major War" and tends to need a different mix of fleet units (more lighter combatants, less "Heavy Metal". For an example of this you can look at the change in British naval composition after the end of the Napoleonic war)
I'll try give an example instead. If you are an admiral in the 3I during the "golden years", and you know that you need "x" number of hulls to cover the border if the penny drops, you're going to be willing to accept some comprimises to keep your funding levels. If the *only* way that the appropriations bill will be approved is if you agree to build your ships in a way that gratiutiously wastes fuel (bill sponsored by Archduke Exxon, Duke Shell and Duke Mobil) will you accept the compromise to get the hulls? If not, are you willing to accept the loss of life in the first few months of an enemy offensive when you are caught without enough units to cover your assigned station?
In a shooting war you are in a position to point out how stupid this is, and hope that it cripples the carrers of the idiots. Unfortunately "political" considerations tend to dominate in times of peace while operational realities are only noticed in times of war. When folks realize that those naval appropriations are what's keeping them alive they stop treating them a "diversion" from their (insert finger-painting waste of taxpayer dollars here). Unfortunately "Finger-painting" is often positioned as "an economically essential activity" in a peactime culture. Any time politics trumps reality you have a culture with potential problems.
IMO requiring hulls that waste this much tankage is incredibly stupid: you are in effect requiring a design that can take 100% surface damage without affecting jump operation, and most vessels will be out of action LONG before that, especially in a "meson dominant" theater. The "savings" in cost for not adding the jump grid are probably offset in additional fuel consumption *in the first year*. The *only* time you are going to see this is in an empire in decline which feels that it has no real external threats (or even serious competition) which (IMO) describes the attitude of the 3I to a tee.
<Politics>
This mindset also describes issues with equipment issued to the US forces at the beginning of the latest "police action" in the Gulf. If you are going to commit troops to a conflict, you should probably listen to the soldiers fought the last war if you want a frank assessment of what is needed to fight the next one. Apologies since this isn't the political pulpit, but it does underscore the point rather well: "You fight a war with the army you've got, not the one you want"
</Politics>
If you disagree with the above (politics) please feel free to flame me via PM, let's try not to clutter up this thread
Scott Martin
FF&S (1) page 42 requires surface area for jump drives (1 square meter per 3 cubic meters of volume) Presumably this is for a jump grid, so TNE *does* require a jump grid.
I though that T4 retained the TNE fuel requirements: I dumped most of it as a technical archietecture due to sensor issues, so I never actually built a ship with it (I did see that it uses surface area for J-Drives though)
See the below post for an explanation of the design philosophy explanation for "fixing" the 3I capital ships: I bet it's a lot easier to retrofit a jump grid onto a battleship than to build them all 20% oversize... It also (partially) explains the "fashion" in T4, since the "Empire" as described has no peers (or major threats)
__________________________
Bill
My Bad, I need to remember to put <sarcasm> tags in when I'm talking about "dangerous" opponents like the Vargr. I believe that other folks have pointed out how unlikely it would be that the (Tl-12) vargr would pose a significant threat to even the "reserve" (TL-14) IN fleet units in corridor.
My attempted slant for CT was that the higher fuel requirements were "margin" for allowing a ship to jump un-gridded. I also called this a "fad" which made its way into the IN design process as a functional specification required either by some set of Imperial bureacrats who couldn't find a jump drive with it lodged firmly in their... ledger sheet, or by a special interest group (led by say, Archduke Exxon). While this is common in *any* era's administration, it tends to be rampant in the decline of an Empire. In a time of relative "peace" idiots can do this without it having an apparent effeect on actual readiness levels. The rest of your comments are pretty much bang on. "Border Skirmishing" is not the same as "Major War" and tends to need a different mix of fleet units (more lighter combatants, less "Heavy Metal". For an example of this you can look at the change in British naval composition after the end of the Napoleonic war)
I'll try give an example instead. If you are an admiral in the 3I during the "golden years", and you know that you need "x" number of hulls to cover the border if the penny drops, you're going to be willing to accept some comprimises to keep your funding levels. If the *only* way that the appropriations bill will be approved is if you agree to build your ships in a way that gratiutiously wastes fuel (bill sponsored by Archduke Exxon, Duke Shell and Duke Mobil) will you accept the compromise to get the hulls? If not, are you willing to accept the loss of life in the first few months of an enemy offensive when you are caught without enough units to cover your assigned station?
In a shooting war you are in a position to point out how stupid this is, and hope that it cripples the carrers of the idiots. Unfortunately "political" considerations tend to dominate in times of peace while operational realities are only noticed in times of war. When folks realize that those naval appropriations are what's keeping them alive they stop treating them a "diversion" from their (insert finger-painting waste of taxpayer dollars here). Unfortunately "Finger-painting" is often positioned as "an economically essential activity" in a peactime culture. Any time politics trumps reality you have a culture with potential problems.
IMO requiring hulls that waste this much tankage is incredibly stupid: you are in effect requiring a design that can take 100% surface damage without affecting jump operation, and most vessels will be out of action LONG before that, especially in a "meson dominant" theater. The "savings" in cost for not adding the jump grid are probably offset in additional fuel consumption *in the first year*. The *only* time you are going to see this is in an empire in decline which feels that it has no real external threats (or even serious competition) which (IMO) describes the attitude of the 3I to a tee.
<Politics>
This mindset also describes issues with equipment issued to the US forces at the beginning of the latest "police action" in the Gulf. If you are going to commit troops to a conflict, you should probably listen to the soldiers fought the last war if you want a frank assessment of what is needed to fight the next one. Apologies since this isn't the political pulpit, but it does underscore the point rather well: "You fight a war with the army you've got, not the one you want"
</Politics>
If you disagree with the above (politics) please feel free to flame me via PM, let's try not to clutter up this thread

Scott Martin