penny wrote:Jonathan_S wrote:Additionally we're told that freighter lack subdivision in their engineering spaces.
The example I remember is warships have heavy subdivision in their impeller rooms so if damage to one node causes it's internal support equipment to catastrophically fail there would be armored and blast absorbing bulkheads around it to prevent it from damaging adjacent impeller support equipment and cause a cascade failure. But freighters instead optimize their impeller rooms for easy monitoring and maintenance from smaller engineering crews so larger rooms that are easier to work in and give better visibility to the equipment (but if some bit of equipment failed catastrophically wouldn't have those separating bulkheads to catch the blast/debris.
I thought the lion's share of a freighter is goods. And a freighter can be configured according to the goods it is carrying. You wouldn't want to mix one system’s goods with another's. So I always assumed that those partitions would double as blast doors. And in the case of heavy equipment such as tractors, automobiles etc., they should be anchored, thus helping to dampen a hit by soaking up damage.
A freighter should also be large enough to spare enough space to utilize some sort of a repulser system to stop or inhibit blasted debris.
I'd have assumed that for nearly all freighters the cargo would all containerized. So you wouldn't need partitions between them any more than you would on a modern day container ship. The containers themselves are tracked and prevent intermingling.
Unloading a bulk-break 8 megaton freighter would probably take you months!
(The containers themselves are probably a lot larger than the modern 2 TUE (40 foot) shipping container. And if you've got something oversized an Honorverse freighter can probably handle oversized containers as long as the dimensions stick to multiples of the standard container dimensions; and they don't get
insanely large).
That said, yes, all those containers (and their contents) would provide
some impromptu protection against hits. Though a graser capable of punching through, say, a heavy cruiser's highly optimized energy dissipating armor would probably go straight through a freighter despite all the containers in its way; especially since the freighter lacks sidewalls to help initially blunt the power of the graser.
And yes, the vast, vast, majority of a freighter's internal volume is cargo bays. But each impeller ring still need to be backed by a ring of impeller rooms, and just omitting all the armored subdivision a warship would carry to break up their impeller rooms would tend to make those pretty spacious in comparison; despite being a tiny fraction of the insane internal volume of a 4 - 8 megaton freighter.