ThinksMarkedly wrote:Think when Honor won at Hades and then pulled everyone out on all the cruisers.
She captured some transport ships too.
The POV was of Honor aboard the cruiser, describing how cramped the cruiser(s) were.
Ashes of Victory, Ch1 wrote: She and Warner Caslet, Farnese's exec, had packed the battlecruiser, like all the other ships of the ESN, to the deckheads to get all of the escapees aboard. The massive redundancy designed into warship life-support systems had let them carry the overload (barely), but it had done nothing about the physical crowding, and the systems themselves were in serious need of maintenance after so long under such heavy demand. The personnel shuttles outside the boat bay were but the first wave of craft which would transport her people from the packed-sardine environment of their battlecruiser to the mountainous surface of San Martin. The planet's heavy gravity scarcely qualified it as a vacation resort, but at least it had plenty of room. And after twenty-four T-days crammed into Farnese's overcrowded berthing spaces, a little thing like weighing twice one's proper weight would be a minor price for the glorious luxury of room in which to stretch without putting a thumb into someone else's eye.
I can't find exactly how many people they actually fit aboard each battlecruiser, but we know how much the absolute minimums were to allow the ship to fight, and if we know how much they were normally rated to carry, we can guesstimate what the true maximum was around.
But a Warlord was nominally carrying a crew of 2200, including its marines, so if they were so packed they were [quote"Ashes of Victory, Ch1"] men and women packed into their ship like emergency rations in a tin[/quote] we can figure it was at least 3x normal crew, if not 4x.
From Echoes epilogue
Echoes of Honor, epilogue wrote: "Tracking made it five battlecruisers, four heavy cruisers, a light cruiser, and two of their Roughneck-class assault transports."
-snip-
"... I am accompanied by approximately one hundred and six thousand liberated inmates of the prison planet Hades."
Each transport had to hold easily multiple battalions worth normally, because that's what they were designed to do. That's easily 2-3000 just off they're normally designed requirements and holding say 3 battalions. But Honor packed in ONE HUNDRED thousand, so each Roughneck was probably holding 15 thousand, making it thirty thousand escapees between them, each Mars was probably holding closer to 10 thousand for another fifty thousand (now upto 80,000 escapees) and the remaining twenty-six thousand between the four heavy cruisers and light cruiser. Give or take those numbers hold up, means a Mars class which is normally rated for 1190-ish personnel can hold upto 5000 for a 3 week journey, as long as you know the ship can either go directly into a shipyard or you won't be using the ship further.