Hi,
A good point of reference might be the US Coast Guard's new proposed Setinel Class patrol boat (http://www.uscg.mil/acquisition/newsroom/pdf/sentinelmediabrief.pdf & http://www.uscg.mil/acquisition/programs/pdf/frcfactsheet.pdf). Its listed as being 353mt in displacement and is designed to patrol for about 5 days then come back in port, and then go out again.
Awhile back I did some calc's on larger naval vessels (such as mine counter-measures vessels, frigates, and destroyers) and found a relationship between metric tons of hydrostatic displacement (mt) and the total enclosed volume of the ship, where 1mt equated to about 0.25 Traveller dtons. I don't know if this relationship is fully valid for Patrol boats, but since the smallest Mine counter-Measures vessel that I looked at was 335mt, it might be a reasonable guess.
If this relationship holds for Patrol Boats, then the USCG Setinel class Patrol Boat would have an enclosed volume on the order of at least 88dtons. A real quick estimate of the staterooms suggests that the smallest may be about [edit] 6.75ft x 5.25ft (which is about 3/4 a dton if the deck heights were assumed to be like in Traveller), but most of the other staterooms are larger than this.
I did a quick scaling of the drawing and overall it looks like if you include all the staterooms, passages, T&S's, and the Galley and Mess Deck you come up with about 32.5 dtons of space for accommodations. This works out to about 1.5 dtons per person. There also appears to be about 1 dton of A/C space forward and the Admin spaces (which include the Pilot House, Office, Storage space, Comms and some lockers (plus a space not labeled) adds up to about another 11.1 dtons. I didn't look at any of the machinery spaces or the magazine though.
Anyway, this suggests that for a ship perhaps like a system defense boat in Traveller with a relatively short patrol duration perhaps maybe something along the lines of about 1.5 dtons per person might be do-able if you were to allow up to 4 persons per stateroom.[end edit]
Anyway, just thought it might be of interest with regards to this discussion.
Regards
PF
A good point of reference might be the US Coast Guard's new proposed Setinel Class patrol boat (http://www.uscg.mil/acquisition/newsroom/pdf/sentinelmediabrief.pdf & http://www.uscg.mil/acquisition/programs/pdf/frcfactsheet.pdf). Its listed as being 353mt in displacement and is designed to patrol for about 5 days then come back in port, and then go out again.
Awhile back I did some calc's on larger naval vessels (such as mine counter-measures vessels, frigates, and destroyers) and found a relationship between metric tons of hydrostatic displacement (mt) and the total enclosed volume of the ship, where 1mt equated to about 0.25 Traveller dtons. I don't know if this relationship is fully valid for Patrol boats, but since the smallest Mine counter-Measures vessel that I looked at was 335mt, it might be a reasonable guess.
If this relationship holds for Patrol Boats, then the USCG Setinel class Patrol Boat would have an enclosed volume on the order of at least 88dtons. A real quick estimate of the staterooms suggests that the smallest may be about [edit] 6.75ft x 5.25ft (which is about 3/4 a dton if the deck heights were assumed to be like in Traveller), but most of the other staterooms are larger than this.
I did a quick scaling of the drawing and overall it looks like if you include all the staterooms, passages, T&S's, and the Galley and Mess Deck you come up with about 32.5 dtons of space for accommodations. This works out to about 1.5 dtons per person. There also appears to be about 1 dton of A/C space forward and the Admin spaces (which include the Pilot House, Office, Storage space, Comms and some lockers (plus a space not labeled) adds up to about another 11.1 dtons. I didn't look at any of the machinery spaces or the magazine though.
Anyway, this suggests that for a ship perhaps like a system defense boat in Traveller with a relatively short patrol duration perhaps maybe something along the lines of about 1.5 dtons per person might be do-able if you were to allow up to 4 persons per stateroom.[end edit]
Anyway, just thought it might be of interest with regards to this discussion.
Regards
PF