Bryn the 2300AD guy
Cosmic Mongoose
D'Artagnon is a French outpost. There is no Indonesian outpost at Barnard's. The nearer parts of the Chinese Arm are:
Barnard's Star: Manchurian (2153, edit, not Mancunian) and American* (2160) planetary outpost with 0.71 G
Seurier: French/ESA (2159) outpost (0.21 G)
Broward**: American outpost (2172, 0.26 G)
DM-26 12026: Manchurian (2172), Argentine (2175), French/ESA (2175) outpost (0.97 G)
Davout: French/ESA (2184) and Japanese (2211) outposts (0.76 G)
D'Artagnon: French/ESA (2185, 0.65 G)
Cold Mountain: first Manchuian colony (2201)
In 2187 the British (not acting with ESA in this case) establish a national outpost at Clarke's Star, which is where the future American Arm forks off.
There is no star DM-46 15540. I assume this is supposed to be DM-46 11540
* American really means American-Australian. The Americans didn't have fully national ships until ca. 2190.
** Named for President Broward, who was CivGov leader in Twilight:2000
However, all this is impossible in the Colinverse. In this universe proper stutterwarp wasn't available until the 2190's. All of this development can't have happened. Jumpers, of course, cannot exist in either universe. To simply paste from the blog:
"
Jumpers and Exploration
In 2nd edition Mong 2k3 there is a new visit from the good idea fairy in the form of "jumpers." If they were in 1st edition, it wasn't in the rules book. These jumpers were separatists or cultists who left Earth for the stars 2130-2170. One should note that in 2130, in all versions, the stutterwarp drive hasn't been invented yet. In the Mongoose continuity, when the last jumpers leave, ESA perhaps hasn't even sent their first colony ships to Tirane, triggering the Alpha Centauri War (which appears to have happened in 2182 rather than than 2162 in that continuity).
The idea that religious whackjobs are building or buying starships before the great powers and heading off into the big black stretches incredulousness. That they got as far as Paulo, Doris (which Colin renamed Kanata for no good reason) and Avalon > 100 years before the professional explorers stretches it further. Doris is 81.69 real light years, and with the insystem journey components the ship would need at least 3 years to reach it. All of the crossings except one are > 3.85 ly (the early drive limit in prime canon which is alluded to in Mongoose).
Then there is the question of how they navigated?
When entering an unexplored system, the first question is where can I discharge? Some explorers can get around this by jettisoning the charged drive if necessary, because they can carry a spare. Without knowing this, you are looking for a body to discharge at, whilst the drive is charged. Now, the techniques used for exoplanet hunting generally don't work. We can only see a fraction of planets, and no increases in resolution etc. will compensate for there literally being no signal. Thus, when an explorer enters a system, they are reliant on their own sensors, or those of probes, to find a reasonable body to discharge the drive at.
Without belabouring the point, there has to be some limiting factor to explain why Man's forward exploration moved forward at about one star system per decade. The counterpoint is, of course, the Bayern module, but that can be explained away perhaps by advances in technology in the 150-odd years since the Jumper times."
Barnard's Star: Manchurian (2153, edit, not Mancunian) and American* (2160) planetary outpost with 0.71 G
Seurier: French/ESA (2159) outpost (0.21 G)
Broward**: American outpost (2172, 0.26 G)
DM-26 12026: Manchurian (2172), Argentine (2175), French/ESA (2175) outpost (0.97 G)
Davout: French/ESA (2184) and Japanese (2211) outposts (0.76 G)
D'Artagnon: French/ESA (2185, 0.65 G)
Cold Mountain: first Manchuian colony (2201)
In 2187 the British (not acting with ESA in this case) establish a national outpost at Clarke's Star, which is where the future American Arm forks off.
There is no star DM-46 15540. I assume this is supposed to be DM-46 11540
* American really means American-Australian. The Americans didn't have fully national ships until ca. 2190.
** Named for President Broward, who was CivGov leader in Twilight:2000
However, all this is impossible in the Colinverse. In this universe proper stutterwarp wasn't available until the 2190's. All of this development can't have happened. Jumpers, of course, cannot exist in either universe. To simply paste from the blog:
"
Jumpers and Exploration
In 2nd edition Mong 2k3 there is a new visit from the good idea fairy in the form of "jumpers." If they were in 1st edition, it wasn't in the rules book. These jumpers were separatists or cultists who left Earth for the stars 2130-2170. One should note that in 2130, in all versions, the stutterwarp drive hasn't been invented yet. In the Mongoose continuity, when the last jumpers leave, ESA perhaps hasn't even sent their first colony ships to Tirane, triggering the Alpha Centauri War (which appears to have happened in 2182 rather than than 2162 in that continuity).
The idea that religious whackjobs are building or buying starships before the great powers and heading off into the big black stretches incredulousness. That they got as far as Paulo, Doris (which Colin renamed Kanata for no good reason) and Avalon > 100 years before the professional explorers stretches it further. Doris is 81.69 real light years, and with the insystem journey components the ship would need at least 3 years to reach it. All of the crossings except one are > 3.85 ly (the early drive limit in prime canon which is alluded to in Mongoose).
Then there is the question of how they navigated?
When entering an unexplored system, the first question is where can I discharge? Some explorers can get around this by jettisoning the charged drive if necessary, because they can carry a spare. Without knowing this, you are looking for a body to discharge at, whilst the drive is charged. Now, the techniques used for exoplanet hunting generally don't work. We can only see a fraction of planets, and no increases in resolution etc. will compensate for there literally being no signal. Thus, when an explorer enters a system, they are reliant on their own sensors, or those of probes, to find a reasonable body to discharge the drive at.
Without belabouring the point, there has to be some limiting factor to explain why Man's forward exploration moved forward at about one star system per decade. The counterpoint is, of course, the Bayern module, but that can be explained away perhaps by advances in technology in the 150-odd years since the Jumper times."
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