Somtaaw wrote:kzt wrote:No, the actual occupied portion of a typical freighter is very small. It's a few percent of the volume. The overwhelming vast majority of a freighter is empty space The cargo bay is hundreds of meters deep and wide by thousands of meters long and it's just empty space under the hyperdrive, reactor and pressurized walkway against the dorsal surface.
The interior of a freighter is inside the compensator so it's always at zero G without the grav plates. You don't really need to secure stuff that strongly as there isn't that much force that will ever be applied to the load.
Sure, but I'm still arguing against Relex's point that after you rip everything "slaver" related out of a slaver's ship, you magically have a freighter ready to go. If refits were that easy, there wouldn't be that huge arsed threadnought of "how to make SLN superdreadnoughts useful".
Hatches, rooms, docking bays large enough to handle full up cargo shuttles (which are presumably larger than a general personnel shuttle), internal cargo shifting, the list goes on and on. Yes the majority of any cargo ship is empty space, but a refit is a refit, whether it's a 200 year old SLN superdreadnought, or a slaver that was just came out of the yard last week.
I don't know of any cutaways showing the internals of HV warships and freighters, aside from one of the Shrike. These, of wet-water vessels, may provide a visualisation of how much more densely packed a warship is compared with a freighter.
http://ep.yimg.com/ca/I/yhst-1960572517 ... _267130594
http://i371.photobucket.com/albums/oo15 ... wing-S.jpg
http://image.slidesharecdn.com/shiptyes ... 1425938136
A different analogy could be a main battle tank compared with a HGV.