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Mesa occupation

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Re: Mesa occupation
Post by Relax   » Fri Sep 25, 2015 9:33 pm

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Weird Harold wrote:
Relax wrote:Why would that equipment not still be there on a slaver? As the Marianne proved, it acts as both cargo freighter and slaver. This means ultimately it is easy to reconfigure the inside. Means the gear for both operations is present.


It would be there. The problem with Marianne and other slavers is the other equipment and partitioning that simple cargo vessels don't have. The stuff RFC says can't be totally erased.


That would be the gas system. How is that a problem? If anything, one gets to strip it and make money. Partitioning will be clip together modular simple stuff. Heck can probably sell that stuff too and make money in this "retrofit". Or as is quite often the case, you either sell or give the rights to strip the interior to recycle, Salvage guys who sell 2nd hand stuff. Such businesses are found in every city around the globe today. Every small business around the globe today relies on such salvage places to start up their businesses on the cheap. Or folks bidding jobs who figure out a way to use such salvage depots. Its a win-win-win. Happens every day in the real world today. I see no reason such businesses would not exist in the HV as well.

PS. To Saber, why Hexagon? Horrifically inefficient for packing goods into.
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Re: Mesa occupation
Post by Weird Harold   » Fri Sep 25, 2015 10:31 pm

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Relax wrote:That would be the gas system. How is that a problem?


It's more than the gas system.

There's the bulkhead between crew and slave areas with only one door -- welded in place, apparently, to prevent over-muscled slaves from ripping it out.

There's the "cargo ejection" doors that don't have safety interlocks to prevent them from dumping atmosphere (along with the slaves.)

It's all of the stuff the author says can't be removed without leaving traces/evidence sufficient to invoke the equipment clause.
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Answers! I got lots of answers!

(Now if I could just find the right questions.)
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Re: Mesa occupation
Post by kzt   » Fri Sep 25, 2015 11:00 pm

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It's magic.

Logically, you would just bolt a module into the cargo bay. You attach it to one of the access hatches leading into the cargo bay from the enclosed catwalk between the forward crew section, the fusion reactor and hyperdrive compartment at the top of the cargo bay and the rear impeller rooms.

It would just need a power input and a data connection, with everything else self-contained. It would probably just look like the kind of cargo modules used to transport live cargo, which presumably are seen often enough. You load it full outside, then you move it into the ship and bolt it in, then at the destination you unbolt it and deliver it.
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Re: Mesa occupation
Post by Relax   » Sat Sep 26, 2015 12:48 pm

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Weird Harold wrote:
Relax wrote:That would be the gas system. How is that a problem?


It's more than the gas system.

There's the bulkhead between crew and slave areas with only one door -- welded in place, apparently, to prevent over-muscled slaves from ripping it out.

There's the "cargo ejection" doors that don't have safety interlocks to prevent them from dumping atmosphere (along with the slaves.)

It's all of the stuff the author says can't be removed without leaving traces/evidence sufficient to invoke the equipment clause.


So, you have issues with replacing the lock on a door, a sensor on a cargo hatch, a gas injection system that you get to sell and make money off of, and stuff that doesn't exist other than extra environmental air cleaners which, guess what? You get to sell and make money off of.

Wow.

SO, when you replace the scuffed up door handle on your front entry way do you tear down your house and build new? Or do you replace the damned lock and handle?

When your garage door is not working properly, do you A) read the instruction manual and figure out how to replace a 9V battery and hit reset, or B) do you tear down your house and start over?

So, When you wish to make the Kitchen/Dinning room/Living room into one big room to make your house seem larger inside, do you tear down your entire house and build new, or do you just tear down the dividing wall?

So, when you buy an old house with very small bedrooms, do you tear down the wall between two bedrooms converting them into one master bedroom and you will probably have to redo the bathroom arrangement for a master bath, or do you tear down your house and start from scratch?

So, when you wish to change out your dining room chandelier or entry way chandelier, do you replace it, donating the old light fixture to Good Will who then sells to 2nd hand salvage yards who then resell it to people who want that design, or do you tear down your house?

:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

PS> He never said they couldn't be removed without trace. They have to exist to invoke the equipment clause even if slaves are not present so it is obvious they are slavers. Traces never hurt anything. In tact equipment on the other hand...
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Re: Mesa occupation
Post by Somtaaw   » Sat Sep 26, 2015 2:28 pm

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Relax wrote:
UH, Just how do you think Shuttles get their goods transported onto them from a freighter currently? Hrmm?

Lets see how Honor "entered" Wayfarer in HAE. It sure as heck is not through an airlock.

"Honor's cutter drifted through the enormous hatch of HMS Wayfarer's Number One Hold. The small craft was a tiny minnow against the vast, star-speckled maw of cargo doors which could easily have admitted a destroyer, and the hold they served was built to the same gargantuan scale. Work lights created pockets of glaring brilliance where parties of yard dogs labored on the final modifications, but there was no atmosphere to diffuse the light, and most of the stupendous alloy cavern was even blacker than the space beyond the hatch."


Cargo holds are airless but can be pressurized. Shuttles land in em, load up, and leave. Yes, they are able to pressurize/depressurize.

I do know this, a 1000 tons of cargo is an immense volume of goods simplicity is the name of the game.

A cargo bay is not a boat bay. A cargo shuttle, is not a pinnace, let alone a cutter for personnel transport. The former is vastly larger than the later.



First of all, if memory serves, the Number One cargohold on the Wayfarer, was actually devoted to her missile pods, which were run off the rails, and went directly into space, so you might want to pick your textev a bit better.

On Basilisk Station shows Scotty and Harkness (with a few other ratings) doing inspections on freighters, in a shirt-sleeve, non-skinsuit environment. By your own textev, entire cargoholds are large enough to not only admit entire destroyers through the hatches, but presumably large enough to start stacking said destroyers likely in the 8-20 numbers with 3D packing.

Shirt-sleeve environment, with enough cubage to park multiple Honorverse destroyers, which are what perhaps 400-500m in length, around 100m across in the beam? And I'd guess at about 30+ stories so lets call the height somewhere about the same as beam at 100-120m height. Now multiply that by even just 8 destroyers for a "small" cargohold, by my calculations that's a 4000m long, by 800m wide by 800m tall. That works out to loosely 2,560,000,000 cubic meters you need to fill with air to make a breathable shirt-sleeve inspectable bay... and that's a small bay.

And you're going on to assume that you can easily pump that amount of air down, so you can have your cargo shuttles directly land inside said cargo bay. Instead of the more reasonable assumption of the same sort of docking areas that standard pinnaces and shuttles dock at. My textev for that assumption is In Enemy Hands, Honor took a single pinnance across to the Prince Adrian, loaded with an entire air scrubber that took up 2/3 of the "passenger" space, and they had to move it from the storage area to where the pinnace was).


We're clearly not going to be agreeing, even remotely close on this, so rather than getting into a war I'm just going to stop and drop this topic now.
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Re: Mesa occupation
Post by Brigade XO   » Sat Sep 26, 2015 3:06 pm

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If you have multiple cargo holds in a freighter, you certainly could have all of them set up to "pump down or repressurize if that was called for. The question is why?

If you are loading starship size shipping contaners which are themselves set up to hook to the power, environmental and commuincations systems of the freighter you might want to be able to put pressure into the hold that and similar containers occupy as a redundancy against leaks/damage to any given container. However, if you are going to supply p/e/c to a given container, you are going to have it hooked up to monitoring equipment in several areas of the ship. That would be 1) environmental, engineering, communication, a module on the bridge and any dedicated monitoring/control position for cargo. In most cases you will probably be automaticaly monitoring all containers requiring "normal" enviornmental conditions so you can discover if something goes wrong. You really don't want those bulk continers of grain/flour etc to get outside the range of proper temperature, humidity, air quality. Such containers may or may not have actual airlocks to let crew inspect or at least access the container's own controls and equipment. You probably would not enter the container durring its entire shipment but if you need to repair something in the controls (or hook up some aux lines to compensate for internal (to the container) problem you will either do it in conjunction with such a lock or external fittings.

If it is something that has internal bulkheads/compartments/passage ways, you probably are going to have it hooked up to at least an access tube to a ships operations passageways and probably going to have it mated to an airlocked hatch to access the container.

There is also going to have to be internal structural members and attachments that can be adjusted to receive containers of various size and physicaly hold them solidly in position (anchor them) inside the hull relative to the ship- relying on tractor and pressor beams is foolish in the extreme, what happens if you lose power-

Having to evacuate the air in a cavern of a cargo compartment only to have to repressurize it again seems wasteful. You are never going to recover all of the air and when you pump it down you need large tanks to hold it to use it again. Then there is the possibiity of a hull breach which would possibly lead to explosive decompression of the hold and probable sympathetic breaching of any pressurized continers in that hold with the violent pressure change.
Air may not be expensive on a fully human compatable planet but shipping to space or manufacturing that much air in a staton is going to cost like crazy.

Any modular containers that are intended for habitation (of any sort) or transporting goods that require full/partial environmental support are going to have to have both back-up power on-board and things like air and water (with controls) so they can operate at least for a short while if there is a problem on the transport or durring movement of the container from a warehouse space over or out to the transport.
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Re: Mesa occupation
Post by Relax   » Sat Sep 26, 2015 3:39 pm

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Somtaaw wrote: My textev for that assumption is In Enemy Hands, Honor took a single pinnance across to the Prince Adrian, loaded with an entire air scrubber that took up 2/3 of the "passenger" space, and they had to move it from the storage area to where the pinnace was)


You do realize that boat bays and pinnaces can both be open to vacuum and pressurized at will? Pinnace cockpit is behind a pressurized door. See SoSag. Kinda hard for IEH escape to happen without a pressurized boat bay. Bays large enough for multiple pinnaces the size of 747's. pressurizing/depressurizing these enormous volumes on a routine basis. Moving the scrubber in a pressure environment would work just fine or in a vacuum.

Don't know about you, but bays large enough for multiple 747 sized objects can fit thousands upon thousands of slaves who then get blown out into space.
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Re: Mesa occupation
Post by Relax   » Sat Sep 26, 2015 3:45 pm

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Brigade XO wrote:If you are loading starship size shipping contaners which are themselves set up to hook to the power, environmental and commuincations systems of the freighter you might want to be able to put pressure into the hold that and similar containers occupy as a redundancy against leaks/damage to any given container. However, if you are going to supply p/e/c to a given container, you are going to have it hooked up to monitoring equipment in several areas of the ship. That would be 1) environmental, engineering, communication, a module on the bridge and any dedicated monitoring/control position for cargo. In most cases you will probably be automaticaly monitoring all containers requiring "normal" enviornmental conditions so you can discover if something goes wrong. You really don't want those bulk continers of grain/flour etc to get outside the range of proper temperature, humidity, air quality. Such containers may or may not have actual airlocks to let crew inspect or at least access the container's own controls and equipment. You probably would not enter the container durring its entire shipment but if you need to repair something in the controls (or hook up some aux lines to compensate for internal (to the container) problem you will either do it in conjunction with such a lock or external fittings.


The way I see it, is that all cargo holds will be at reduced pressure/temperature that is a standard for all shippers. Say, 0.5atm, and 15C or some such. There is pretty much no other way to reconcile OBS with a cargo bay not under pressure.

As for the feasibility of pressurizing/depressurizing, we have seen time and time again, that energy in the Honorverse is essentially free, so the cost of doing this, is absurdly low.

And as I have said before and agree with you 100%, the goods will be shipped in standardized containers. And yes, I also agree each container will be able to withstand vacuum and will have p/e/c readout tied to the bridge just as is done on freighters today. Though in their case it is just Power, and comms.
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Re: Mesa occupation
Post by Vince   » Sat Sep 26, 2015 5:31 pm

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Relax wrote:
Somtaaw wrote: My textev for that assumption is In Enemy Hands, Honor took a single pinnance across to the Prince Adrian, loaded with an entire air scrubber that took up 2/3 of the "passenger" space, and they had to move it from the storage area to where the pinnace was)


You do realize that boat bays and pinnaces can both be open to vacuum and pressurized at will? Pinnace cockpit is behind a pressurized door. See SoSag. Kinda hard for IEH escape to happen without a pressurized boat bay. Bays large enough for multiple pinnaces the size of 747's. pressurizing/depressurizing these enormous volumes on a routine basis. Moving the scrubber in a pressure environment would work just fine or in a vacuum.

Don't know about you, but bays large enough for multiple 747 sized objects can fit thousands upon thousands of slaves who then get blown out into space.

IIRC, MaxxQ has said that only parts of the boat bays where people work are kept pressurized. The entire volume of the boat bays are not pressurized. For example:
Echoes of Honor, Chapter 18 wrote:"And come out of there, you worthless piece of—Ah ha!"
Scooter Smith sat back on his haunches with a triumphant grin as the recalcitrant tracking drive of the LAC's number three laser cluster finally yielded to his ministrations. He didn't know how the defective drive shaft had gotten past the myriad inspections which were supposed to spot such things, but that was less important than that it had. Well, that and the fact that its sub-spec materials had warped and jammed the cluster's training gears solid at a most inopportune moment during yesterday's exercises. It had also managed to splinter and deform itself sufficiently to resist all removal efforts with sullen stolidity for the better part of two hours, and they'd had to strip the entire unit down much further than he'd hoped, but they had it out now.
He tossed it to one of his techs and stood, rubbing the small of his back, then climbed down the side of the work stand.
One of the nicer things about HMS Minotaur's LAC bays was that someone had actually bothered to put some thought into servicing and ammunitioning requirements. Smith's last assignment had been as an assault shuttle section chief aboard HMS Leutzen, and, like every other shuttle maintenance specialist, it seemed as if he'd spent about a third of his on-duty time in a skinsuit or a hardsuit floating around in the zero-gee vacuum of a boat bay while he pulled hull maintenance on one or another of the small craft under his care. In most ways, Minotaur's LACs were simply small craft writ large, and he'd expected to face the same problem, only more so. And he was spending a good bit of time suited up . . . but nowhere near as much of it as he'd anticipated.
Whoever had designed Minotaur had taken extraordinary pains to enhance crew efficiency. Even after five months on board, Smith was still a bit awed by the degree of automation she incorporated. Traditionally, warships had embarked crews which were enormously larger than any merchant ship of equivalent tonnage would have boasted. That was largely because merchant ships tended to be nothing more than huge, hollow spaces into which to stuff cargo, whereas warships were packed full of weapons, ammunition, defensive and offensive electronic warfare systems, sidewall generators, back up fusion plants, bigger Warshawski sails, more powerful beta nodes, and scores of other things merchantmen simply didn't carry and hence had no reason to provide crews for. But it was also true that merchies relied far more heavily than warships on automated and remote systems to reduce manpower requirements still further.
Italics are the author's, boldface and underlined text is my emphasis.

As for Honor escaping Tepes, yes she and all the other escapees were in shirtsleeves, but the boat bay galleries and passageways are what are kept pressurized, not the entire bay itself:
In Enemy Hands, Chapters 28, 29 & 30 wrote:
Chapter 28

***Snip***

Well, there shouldn't be anyone down here, he told himself. This passage was normally used only to service the docking and umbilical arms of Boat Bay Four. If small craft operations had been underway, there would have been an excellent chance of running into someone, but there were no launch orders on the schedule Harkness had pulled out of the main computers. Even if there had been, they wouldn't have used Bay Four . . . unless Cordelia Ransom had decided for some reason that she had to make an all-up assault landing on StateSec's own prison planet.

***Snip***

Skip to Chapter 29

***Snip***

Another of Harkness' programs had locked all the lifts to Boat Bay Four—a fact the Peeps obviously had already discovered. So far, they were restricting themselves to the forward lift only, and since they couldn't use the lift car itself, they'd come down the shaft and tried to blow the doors into the gallery. They'd partially succeeded, and the explosion when they blew the doors had killed Chief Reilly, but the rest of McKeon's people had massacred the entire assault team before it could clear the shaft. The undamaged rear lift remained a threat, but McKeon had decided against blowing it himself. Honor might need it, and Sanko and Halburton made a pretty effective security measure. Anyone who tried to use it to attack the boat bay might get as far as opening the doors; he certainly wouldn't get any further.

***Snip***

"Ready to launch, Sir!"
McKeon turned at Geraldine Metcalf's shout. She stood just outside the docking tube to the bay's number two assault shuttle, and he waved acknowledgment. His tac officer swam down the tube while Anson Lethridge unlocked the docking arms. Then the shuttle's thrusters flared as Metcalf sent it drifting out of the bay, and McKeon took a moment to breathe a silent prayer that Harkness really had gotten the Peeps' weapons shut down.

***Snip***

Skip to Chapter 30

***Snip***

"Looks like they finally kicked my butt out, Sir," he said, and bared his teeth in a wolfish grin. "But by the time they did, just about everything but life support got slagged right down to glass. Even if we don't make it, they're gonna be a long time trying to put this bucket of bolts back on-line."
"So they've got complete control of whatever's left?" McKeon asked.
"Just about, Sir. I don't think they can break my lock on that lift—" he pointed to the intact lift doors through which no attack had yet come "—and there's no software left down here in the bay itself. But give 'em another forty, fifty minutes, and they're gonna start getting some sensors and weapons back under manual control. And when they do—"
He broke off with a shrug, and McKeon nodded grimly.

***Snip***

"The lift! Someone's coming down the lift!"
McKeon whirled at the shout, and his heart leapt. If Harkness' lockout had held, that could only be the people who'd gone after Honor, and if it wasn't—
He beckoned, and Sanko and Halburton turned their plasma rifle back to the undamaged lift while Anson Lethridge dashed across the deck towards it with a grenade launcher. But then the lift stopped, the doors opened, and Lethridge froze. He stared into it, ugly face blanching, and then he hurled away his launcher and charged into it. McKeon followed on his heels, and the captain gasped in horror at what he saw.

***Snip***

It was her arm. Her left arm was shattered just above the elbow, and Lethridge's hands moved with desperate speed as he whipped his own belt around her upper arm, right at the armpit, and yanked the crude tourniquet tight. And then he and McKeon between them picked her horribly limp, blood-soaked body up and ran for the pinnace.
Italics are the author's, boldface is my emphasis.

No mention of the pinnace (actually an assault shuttle, the terms seem to be used interchangeably in the text) that Honor and LaFollet were put aboard of being in a pressurized area. Presumably it was connected by a pressure tube like the other pinnance (the diversionary one that was destroyed by Camp Charon's command detonated mines) and assault shuttles. If it had been in a pressurized area, the escapees would have had to use the pinnance's weapons to breach the hatch for both their own pinnane/assault shuttle and the diversionary pinnance, because Harkness had slagged everything but life support, and there was no software left in the bay to unlock and open a hatch the size a pinnance or assault shuttle would need to leave the boat bay.

Everywhere it is mentioned in the books, people embark and disembark shuttles and pinnances through tubes--either by swimming the tube in zero-g (for naval personnel) or by walking aboard in one gravity in outsize tubes (for civilian customers of passenger liners), when the shuttles or pinnances are in a boat bay or space station. Even the Queen of Manticore swam the tube to board when she came aboard HMS Imperator to meet with President Pritchart and her entourage:
Mission of Honor, Chapter 43 wrote:The pinnace which docked with HMS Imperator’s forward boat bay was Duchess Harrington’s personal small craft. As such, it had priority over any other auxiliary assigned to her flagship, although it was just a bit unusual for even her pinnace to be accompanied—one might have said “escorted”—by a pair of Royal Manticoran Army trans-atmospheric sting ships.
The flight operations officer in charge of Imperator’s small craft movements didn’t seem surprised to see them, however. He simply acknowledged their presence and assigned them berthing slots on either side of Duchess Harrington’s craft.
But if he’d been warned what to expect, it quickly became evident that the boat bay officer of the deck (who, at this extremely late hour of Imperator’s shipboard day, was an extremely junior ensign with red hair, fair skin, and blue eyes, rejoicing in the name of Hieronymus Thistlewaite) hadn’t been. That young man had spotted the duchess’ arrival and mustered the proper side party for an admiral of her towering seniority. He looked just a bit nervous, since there were no older and wiser heads looking over his shoulder this time, but Ensign Thistlewaite seemed reasonably confident he had the situation under control.
Until, that was, Elizabeth Adrienne Samantha Annette Winton, Grand Commander of the Order of King Roger, Grand Commander of the Order of Queen Elizabeth I, Grand Commander of the Order of the Golden Lion, Baroness of Crystal Pine, Baroness of White Sand, Countess of Tannerman, Countess of High Garnet, Grand Duchess of Basilisk, Princess Protector of the Realm, and, by God’s grace and the will of Parliament, Queen Elizabeth III of the Star Kingdom of Manticore, and Empress Elizabeth I of the Star Empire of Manticore, swung lithely out of the boarding tube at Duchess Harrington’s heels.
None of the side party had expected their monarch’s sudden arrival, and not even naval discipline was enough to hide their astonishment.
“Eighth Fleet, arri—” a voice began over the boat bay speakers, then chopped off abruptly as the petty officer behind it realized who else had just appeared aboard his ship.
The smooth efficiency of the side party’s formalities slithered to a halt, and Ensign Thistlewaite’s jaw dropped. Then it closed with an almost audible snap, his face turned a considerably darker red than his hair, and he stared appealingly at the duchess.
Manticore, arriving!” the speakers said suddenly as the petty officer recovered abruptly, and the bosun’s pipes began to twitter again while three additional side boys came dashing up from somewhere.
“Permission to come aboard, Sir?” Elizabeth said gravely, managing not to smile, as the twitter of pipes came to an end. The first two bodyguards who’d emerged from the tube behind her, wearing the uniform of the Queen’s Own, appeared rather less amused than she obviously was, but Thistlewaite’s blue eyes looked back at her with desperate gratitude.
“Permission granted, Ma’am—I mean, Your Majesty!”
Honor hadn’t believed the young man could turn even redder, but she’d been wrong.
“Permission to come aboard, Sir?” she repeated as Elizabeth stepped past her.
“Permission granted, Your Grace.” Thistlewaite’s relief at getting back to something familiar was obvious as she returned his salute, and she smiled slightly.
“My apologies, Ensign,” she said. “We organized this on the fly, as it were, and we didn’t want the newsies getting word of Her Majesty’s visit. Apparently you didn’t get the word in time, either.”
“Uh, no, Ma’am,” he admitted, blushing a bit less blindingly.
“Well, it happens,” she said philosophically while another passel of armsmen and bodyguards appeared behind her and the Queen, then nodded to him and turned to Elizabeth. “This way, Your Majesty,” she said.
“Thank you, Admiral,” Elizabeth replied. She nodded and smiled to Thistlewaite in turn, then headed towards the lift banks at Honor’s side, accompanied by three Grayson armsmen, six members of the Queen’s Own, one plainclothes officer from Palace Security, and two treecats, who appeared inordinately amused by the two-legs’ antics as they rode their persons’ shoulders.
Italics are the author's, boldface and underlined text is my emphasis.

The only time we see people directly walking in or out of pinnances and shuttles is when the pinnances or shuttles are on a planetary surface with breathable atmosphere.

Summary:

1) Boat bays (where pinnances, cutters and shuttles dock to ships) are NOT routinely pressurized and depressurized, they are in the continuous vacuum of space.

2) Boat bay galleries, lift tubes leading to them, the lift cars that run in the lift tubes, passageways leading to and from the boat bay, and passageways internal to the boat bays are kept continuously pressurized under normal conditions. They should be depressurized (pump down the air) prior to combat situations, if the ship the boat bay is part of is a combatant vessel.

3) Boat bay tubes are routinely pressurized when a pinnance, cutter or shuttle is docked prior to personnel embarking/disembarking, and are kept pressurized until just prior to the pinnance, cutter or shuttle undocking.

4) Boat bay tubes are routinely depressurized (pump down the air) after the hatches at both ends of the tube (both the pinance's, cutter's or shuttle's and the boat bay's tube hatch) [edit] are secured and sealed [/edit] prior to a docked shuttle, pinnance or cutter undocking.
Last edited by Vince on Sat Sep 26, 2015 8:28 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Mesa occupation
Post by SYED   » Sat Sep 26, 2015 7:29 pm

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In their constitution, slaves have actual legal protection. The thing is that it was simply never enforced. I bet their own databases is filled with evidence, security recordings or reports, as well as over seventy percent f he pupulation eager to testify.
They could also raise new security and police forces from the slaves and their descendants, that could quickly out number any free citizen force.
To stem the bloodshed offer the citizens a chance to escape Mesa, they could think it is merely temporary but at least gets them out of the way.
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