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Just how big IS a hyper drive | |
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by frasernator » Wed Aug 15, 2018 10:25 am | |
frasernator
Posts: 7
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Forgive me is this has been answered before, I am new here and there are LOTS of posts to try and dig through to potentially find an answer:
I'm just wondering just how big is a hyper drive generator relative to the size of the vessel being pushed into hyper? I ask for a few different scenarios that occur to me: A ship has a catastrophic failure and is stuck literally in the middle of nowhere(Think Victor and Anton at the end of "Torch of Freedom"). Would it be possible to build an emergency buoy that could get into even the lower hyper bands and go on pre-programed path for help? Yes I know you would have to also work out how to power this sucker. I have no idea if it would be possible to put Alpha Nodes on it to allow it to generate a Warshawski sail if you want it to be able to go through Grav waves etc. Another scenario is a Wormhole Junction Buster: Could you build something that would be basically a bunch of missile pods attached to our theoretical hyper generator. For this to work you would only need a reaction drive to move it forward into the controlled end of the junction and specialized nodes that only need to generate a Warshawski Sail. Once through the other side it would go to a maximum reaction drive burn with all the ECM you could cram into it to clear the immediate area of the terminus. Once clear: the missile pods could separate, again on their own reaction drives, acquire targets and launch missiles hopefully at targets that are caught by surprise and not had a chance to come to full battle stations and try to cause as much chaos as possible with a quick follow up with actual manned ships to take advantage of the confusion from the initial attack. If this is a dumb idea I fully understand, but I didn't see the harm in just asking the question. Thanks |
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Re: Just how big IS a hyper drive | |
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by drothgery » Wed Aug 15, 2018 4:10 pm | |
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It seems like a minimum hyperdrive is about 10-20 Ktons, just going by the sizes of the smallest dispatch boat or yacht (30-40 Ktons) vs the smallest remotely modern LAC (about 20 Ktons). We also know hyper generator size does not scale linearly with tonnage of the entire ship; the hyper generator is a much smaller percentage of the mass of an 8 Mton SD or freighter than it is of a dispatch boat or frigate.
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Re: Just how big IS a hyper drive | |
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by frasernator » Wed Aug 15, 2018 4:37 pm | |
frasernator
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From my limited understanding and research I've been able to do on my own the hyper drive generator is basically a fancy magnetic field generator. As long as the field can surround the entire vessel you are good to go. Because either system would be unmanned you don't need to worry about extra size for things like life support and inertial compensators. You would have the drive system, power supply, computers and communication systems nothing else meaning something that would be smaller than even a dispatch boat and more like a long endurance drone. I'm not sure if you normally need to also contain the impeller bands, but if so you would either have no impeller at all or you could turn them off during the transit then back on again. That being said the field needs to be much smaller, the hope is the required field generator would be smaller to |
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Re: Just how big IS a hyper drive | |
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by kzt » Wed Aug 15, 2018 6:10 pm | |
kzt
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Bigger than a breadbox.
We don't know any more unless I've forgotten something. There isn't even any real evidence that I recall that it scales with the size of the ship. It makes sense that it does, but it's highly unlikely to be linear scaling. |
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Re: Just how big IS a hyper drive | |
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by Vince » Wed Aug 15, 2018 7:05 pm | |
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Definitely bigger than a breadbox. Aboard the Hali Sowle: Italics are the authors', boldface is my emphasis. It should be noted that the parts needed to fix the hyper generator fit into a shipping crate: Italics are tha authors', boldface is my emphasis. -------------------------------------------------------------
History does not repeat itself so much as it echoes. |
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Re: Just how big IS a hyper drive | |
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by frasernator » Thu Aug 16, 2018 11:22 am | |
frasernator
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We are still talking about a million ton ship. I guess unless someone writes a a new story with a detailed description of the drive, perhaps going back to when the hyper drive was first being developed, we'll never get a true cannon answer. Oh well
I cannot imagine that when the scientists were first developing this thing in a lab they would be building anything big enough to put even a single small living creature(poor lab rat) into it. Just a box with a computer sensors and the generator itself and see if it ever comes back. That I think would give us an absolute minimum size that we could work from. |
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Re: Just how big IS a hyper drive | |
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by munroburton » Thu Aug 16, 2018 11:47 am | |
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Depending on how one reads this, they're all standing inside the hyper generator. Sort of like working on a massive marine diesel engine. In some cases, technicians have to climb inside the engine. Not whilst under operation, of course. |
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Re: Just how big IS a hyper drive | |
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by Jonathan_S » Thu Aug 16, 2018 11:50 am | |
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I'm not finding where I got the impression from but I thought a courier ship had about the smallest hyper generator anybody knew how to build - but RFC has definitely said before that you can't build a hyper generator small enough to fit in anything like a missile or drone. So I'm thinking a minimum size in the 10 - 20 meter on a side cube range.
Large enough to constrain the minimum size of a dispatch boat/courier but not a major impact on the internal volume of even a DD(L) much less any larger warship. But that's just my speculation. |
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Re: Just how big IS a hyper drive | |
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by Kael Posavatz » Thu Aug 16, 2018 12:50 pm | |
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Actually, it was a courier was the smallest vessel capable of carrying one (and ancillary equipment like alpha nodes, Warshawski tuners, &etc.; and that made economic sense/fulfilled a needed purpose). That is, the comment was in relationship to the size of the vessel, not the generator itself. We know that reaching higher bands requires a larger generator. there's some discussion on this in HAE where RMMS Artemis suffered some damage to the hyper generator during the battle of selker drift. And I seem to recall that when the Sprint Drive was discussed it was noted for being larger than standard hyper-generators. |
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Re: Just how big IS a hyper drive | |
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by frasernator » Thu Aug 16, 2018 4:00 pm | |
frasernator
Posts: 7
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Something else to consider going back to my original ideas on how an ultra small hyper drive could be used. For good reason any drive installed into a ship needs to have serviceability in mind.
For either an emergency system or expendable weapon, the drive can be a bare-bones black box device that will be used once to do its job then be disposed of after This would cut down on housing size etc. |
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