Colin said:Jame Rowe said:One thing: Make. The. Fusion. Power. Plants. MORE! EFFICIENT!
Pardon the yelling, but I want to make sure ... not that I'm heard, but rather that I'm replied to.
Fusion power plants in 2300AD are sealed units, with enough fuel to last the 10 year lifespan of the reactor. They also have a minimum size/output, and require a lot of crew. Not as many as a fission plant, though. Fission plants come with removable fuel assemblies, and are generally good for one year before the fuel package needs to be removed and replaced.
Ah. So they are actually more efficient - in terms of fuel, which is what I was referring to.
Crew is a different issue, which I hadn't given a thought to.
Ishmael said:Why make fusion power plants more efficient?
I guess I should read up on how Mongoose Trav handles them, but I'd think its not a matter of how efficient the fusion process is. It's more a matter of how efficiently the available technology can harness the power that *is* released and how much of that energy is lost through waste heat and other forms of radiation... and even noise.
If your objection is the insane 'fuel' usage, then the excess 'fuel' might be considered to be coolant that is lost overboard for the sake of thermal control ( which none of the rules really handle well, imho ).
The rule, at least in the Spaceships chapter of MG:TMB, is that a power plant requires a certain tonnage of fuel for two weeks usage; earlier versions of Trav, e.g. Classic, used certain tonnage per four weeks usage. My thing is that the MGT version of it isn't as efficient as the CT version. Your reaction of it being excess coolant is something I'll consider.
crazy_cat said:I'd have thought shouting, having a little tantrum, and generally behaving like a spoiled child (with a rather unjustified sense of entitlement to immediate answers that are to your liking) is likely to get you ignored rather than generating the sensible reply and then related conversation you're obviously seeking.
This sort of statement is even less likely to get a reasonable conversation going, and therefore makes me wonder why I'm replying to it.