Theemile wrote:
David has stated that no dry docks are enclosed shirt sleeve environments - all are vacuum environments. the main difference between the 3 types of dockyards are:
Hard: a dry dock is a scaffolding to support the construction and has all the hardware required to construct every major component on site and dedicated to the project.
Soft (or de-centralized): the dry dock is a scaffolding to support construction and the hardware is present to complete construction - components are fabricated in centralized location s around the yard and moved to the docks. Some versions of this use the modern "superlift" modular method, mass building ship modules on an assembly line and bolting them all together in a dry-dock, and completing the outer armor layers.
Grayson style - parts necessary to build a ship are dropped at a specified location. components are occasionally pre-fabricated elsewhere, required construction hardware moves from site to site as required.
I agree and was using the term Dry-Dock in that sence. When Honor's 1st Heavy Cruser is having node replacement surgery that's all out in vacume by space station. When Hexapuma and Warlock (and others) were being repaird at Monica, they were in the care of the repair ship but all that was being done at the repair ship and not in at what was left of the yard faciites at Monica.
There are mobile dry-docks (and have been for a while- seen some nice photos of a US Battleship getting repairs in the Pacific in a dock that had been towed out there by a tug. Heck, when I was consulting about 6 years I ago I got an education in mobile dry-docks when I reviewed the financing of one. It was built and towed to it's primary operations location (would be moved by Oceangoing Tug but would be shifted from place to place as needed. Bunch of that would be governmenet work - (with contracts...you really like to have an income stream) but the design and intention was to be able to move it to where it was needed for customers instead of having to bring them to it.
I suspect that for much of the types of repair work you have to do on starships, you can isolate the area(s) being worked on if they normaly are pressurized and then slowly remove the air before opeing any related parts to space.
I seem to recall that one of the things that caught Honor's attention about Sirius at Basilisk was that it was very odd that the freighter hadn't even attempted to arrange for any kind of repair ship to come and fix the problem if it was beyond whatever was available either in Basilisk orbit or out by the terminus. While not being adequately give RMN presence due to political issues, was there nothing out near the terminus as far as transhipment or repair facilities for starships? Things break. A starship that can't use W-sails having just come a long way to a wormhole bridge is sort of like a kitten stuck up a tree. Falling really isn't an option and there are time and non-performance clauses in inter-stellar shipping contracts. Get it fixed or your going to lose you ship and worse.
Commercial operations for repair and warehousing/transfer if nothing else.
And, no, your not going to have a large repair ship (or a small one) running at the speed of a capital warship. But you are going to want them to go at least as fast as a commerical freighter of not the Military Fast Transports even if you only want to boost the compensators and particle shielding. Besides, your going to send something for an escort for a military repair ship and if your sending it to someplace new or where there is major work to be done there may be some additional transport needs for parts etc.