Theemile wrote:Besides, if this is true, you would never turn off both reactors, one always being kept on while work was done on the 2nd. The worry would single reactor Merchies.
I was thinking of battle damage. You don't want to get a destroyer or light-cruiser stranded after a battle if both reactors shut down, if you can relight them.
But as you said, it might be that this condition is so uncommon, that the damage required to cause both to scram is so great, that it's not worthwhile having the starter motor aboard.
But the current state of single reactor ships just shows the maturity of the technology. the loss of the reactor is not a problem worth worrying about.
In a similiar logic, 4 engine passenger planes were previously dictated on Earth for intercontinental flight. In the 60's 4 or 5 crew members on the flight deck were required to to fly planes. (2 Pilots, 1 navigator, 1 radio operator and 1 engineeer.) Now, double engine planes with 2 crew members can fly nearly 10 thousand miles, why, the Engines are powerful enough and reliable enough that a single engine can limp a plane along reliably, and modern electronics made the nav, radio operator, and engineer positions unnecessary.
Wasn't the
Lockheed Constellation dubbed "the most reliable tri-engine" because one was always faulty? I know I've seen this phrase before, but I can't find it any more to confirm it was about the Connies.
The interesting thing is that the twin-engine reliability isn't THAT old. Just look at the fact that Airbus designed the A380 with 4 in the 1990s. Twin-engine jets were limited to 120 minutes between diversion airports well into the 2000s, as not all authorities accepted
777's ETOPS-180 rating. Now, the A350 has ETOPS-370. The other thing is that many of those newer aircraft can actually fly pretty well with just one engine, at least as far as required to reach safe harbour.
But that's civilian craft. They're not expected to go into battle and have extreme redundancy to cope with battle damage. They have redundancy (like three separate hydraulic systems), just not to the extreme.