JustinInOz
SOC-12
G'Day,
I have done a search on jump timing and jump duration. I did not really find what I was after.
From what I understand a jump takes 151 to 184 hours (168, +- 10%) under normal circumstances. Jumpspace being what it is in Traveller, this variation is not predictable.
How does it work, can fleets all jump together and does this mean that they all precipitate out of jumpspace at the same moment?
I imagine that they do. If they did not, they would probably be destroyed piecemeal as the fleet arrived over the course of 33 hours.
If they do not arrive contemporaneously, do they have to arrive far enough away from the proposed strategic interest (planet, gas giant or base) so that no one can accelerate fast enough to engage them before everyone gets there?
Aside from blatant (and boring) handwavium, how do you justify 100 ships jumping and arriving at the same moment?
Do they all plot the exact same jump run and execute it at the same moment? Why should that mean they arrive together?
Is it not more interesting that they arrive at the same place, but out of phase for time? It always struck me that the jumps were very spatially accurate but unfocussed on the temporal part.
J.
I have done a search on jump timing and jump duration. I did not really find what I was after.
From what I understand a jump takes 151 to 184 hours (168, +- 10%) under normal circumstances. Jumpspace being what it is in Traveller, this variation is not predictable.
How does it work, can fleets all jump together and does this mean that they all precipitate out of jumpspace at the same moment?
I imagine that they do. If they did not, they would probably be destroyed piecemeal as the fleet arrived over the course of 33 hours.
If they do not arrive contemporaneously, do they have to arrive far enough away from the proposed strategic interest (planet, gas giant or base) so that no one can accelerate fast enough to engage them before everyone gets there?
Aside from blatant (and boring) handwavium, how do you justify 100 ships jumping and arriving at the same moment?
Do they all plot the exact same jump run and execute it at the same moment? Why should that mean they arrive together?
Is it not more interesting that they arrive at the same place, but out of phase for time? It always struck me that the jumps were very spatially accurate but unfocussed on the temporal part.
J.