Always.
Always. ALWAYS ... question your convictions
... even when you're SURE you've already found The Right Answer.
As longtime readers of this thread will already know, one of the reasons that I settled upon the "12 ton box" form factor for modules is that I just couldn't figure out a way to make a "10 ton box"
work without being needlessly wasteful. The "12 ton box" form factor made a really NICE looking 7.5x7.5x3m square box (168.75m
3/14≈12 tons) which had the benefit of being able to 90º rotate and "still fit just fine" to permit all kinds of "jhenga stacking" in 3D such that you only needed 1 horizontal corridor and a vertical lift through the center for access through a set of linked up boxes (N/S below, E/W above in a 2x2x2 stack of 8 boxes).
That "12 ton box" form factor then became the fundamental building block for a modularized "container transport" standard which could be built up into use for jump/maneuver tug starships. The 5x5 deck squares arrangement was COMPACT with a minimum of wasted space, while also representing the absolute minimum size that I could craft a single occupancy stateroom into (2.5x2 deck squares, to be exact), not including (shared) access corridor space. The "odd number of staterooms plus one" helped create the necessary "four corners of symmetry" needed by the deck plans, yielding a "nicely balanced" look to the final results.
Observe.
Everything else got built upwards from that "lowest common denominator constraint" of needing to build everything in multiples of 12 tons (and preferably in even numbered multiples of 12 to keep things "balanced" in 3D).
The "odd number of staterooms plus one" helped create the necessary "four corners of symmetry" needed by the deck plans
Hold on.
Wait a minute.
If 3 starship staterooms = 12 tons ... and 3+1=4 (an even number) ... and a minimum deck plan of 2.5x2 compartment spaces can fit 4x into a 5x5 square box with a 5x1 access corridor shared between them ...
(2.5*2)=5
5*4=20
20/25 = 80% volume used by compartment living spaces out of 5x5 deck square box form factor displacing 12 tons
Then 5 starship staterooms = 20 tons ... and 5+1=6 (another even number) ... a minimum stateroom deck plan of 2.5x2.25 compartment spaces ought to be able to fit 6x into a 7.5x5.5 rectangle box with a 7.5x1 access corridor shared between them ...
(2.5*2.25)=5.625
5.625*6=33.75
7.5*5.5=41.25
33.75/41.25 = 81.8181% volume used by compartment living spaces out of 7.5x5.5 deck square box form factor displacing 20 tons
So by switching from a 12 ton "square" deck plan to a 20 ton "rectangular" deck plan form factor, the amount of volume that needs to be spent on corridor access FALLS (slightly) as a fraction of usable volume? And the stateroom compartments get LARGER at the same time?
And what's this 7.5x5.5 deck squares stuff? Where did those numbers come from?
That's just ... weird.
Well ...
(7.5*1.5) * (5.5*1.5) * 3 = 278.4375m
3
20 * 14 = 280m
3
278.4375 / 280 = 99.44%
Here's what it looks like when you take that set of fundamental building blocks and assemble them together into a basic foundational structure to make deck plans with:
And here's what happens when you stack these 7.5x5.5 rectangles on top of each other into a 2x2x2 block of modules, with the top layer rotated 90º from the lower layer:
Not QUITE as compact as a 2x2x2 stack of squares (because you're stacking rectangles instead), but that "wasted space" around the edges is nowhere NEAR as bad as it could have been. It's also aggregating together as a bit more "dispersed structure-ish" than the purely square stack would when doing the same thing.
The big takeaway here though is that a 2x2x2=8 block of 12 ton (square) box modules adds up to 96 tons ... while a 2x2x2=8 block of 20 ton modules adds up to 160 tons ... which then has implications for making "pods" that are really just multiple blocks of modules stuck together.
12 * 8 = 96 tons = Hull Code: 0 displacement size (still)
20 * 4 = 80 tons = Hull Code: 0 displacement size (still)
So how everything "stacks" together (on the spreadsheet mathematically and in the "2D trying to be 3D" deck plans) undergoes a subtle but important shift by switching to a different form factor.
Obviously, a 20 ton (rectangular) "box" foundational unit would make a LOT of factors easier to deal with when it comes to things like major and minor cargo lots, which come in 10 ton and 5 ton multiple sizes.
This is
exactly the kind of mental/conceptual breakthrough that I needed in order to legitimately question whether or not the 12 ton, 5x5 deck squares "box" container module was the optimal solution that I thought it was (and have been convinced of for some time now).
Now I'm left wondering if the 20 ton, 7.5x5.5 deck squares "rectangle" container module makes for a superior choice of fundamental building block ... with all kinds of knock on (conceptual) side effects that favors an extremely foundational shift in assumptions, starship construction and even economic possibilities.
Only one way to find out ...