AnotherDilbert said:
? M-drives are thrusters.
True, but they are thrusters in the rear of the craft that push the craft forward. As you cited in your example of SOM, the thruster plates are pushers. Pg 2 of SOM has an illustration that shows thruster plates can only provide thrust in a single direction. They can, however, be located anywhere (that fits the description of the Broadsword, as they are located in 4 separate places, all pointing aft) on a ship's hull, but again if you look at the artwork engines are always depicted in the aft section.
AnotherDilbert said:
Some spacecraft are tail-landers (Mercenary C), some have wings (Serpent, pinnace, Subbie), and some are conventional tail-pushers that perhaps are more graceful in space. SSOM, p2-3 describes in detail how tail-pushers land without wings or agrav. Yes, they descend on their thrusters.
Of the core set of ships published in the editions, the Broadsword is the only one to be a tail sitter. The wings on the starships in question would be of limited use for lift-purposes as the mass of the vessel would negate any sort of lift unless it was moving at very high speeds. And even then it would be insufficient to allow it to lift off (not to mention it would require a runway and wheeled landing gear.
Smaller vessels like the Shuttle would be better suited, but still their mass would preclude the wings providing enough lift to take off like an airplane.
AnotherDilbert said:
I have never seen this assumption, unwritten or written, before TNE. SSOM says otherwise.
Can you point to a specific part of canon where that is described?
Reynard said:
"Can you point to a specific part of canon where that is described?" In Mongoose specifically or in the sources I listed in my two earlier posts?
According to SOM, thruster plates are able to 'push' at an angle, though with much reduced efficiency. They are also capable of reverse thrust (i.e. braking) at like .1 percent of their output. It was at this point that I thought the designers were trying to stretch the idea too far, especially since it seemed to go against their other explanation.
FF&S for TNE pg 13 lists "Also included under this heading is the addition of lifter technology as required for movement on or near a planet. This is particularly the case for spacecraft in the Imperial space campaign, which use contra-grav lifters. See the lifters chapter (section 10).
Pg 75 of FF&S gives more detail, but "Many spacecraft have contra-grav lifters as fuel-efficient means of landing and taking off from a planet surface, and CG lifters are also used on grav vehicles. CG lifters do not provide thust... it goes on to talk about buoyancy instead of actual lift, but the effect is the same.
Look at the cover of the GURPS Starships book and you'll see the port layout and starships in hovering mode indicating a requirement for vertical ascent and descent. A Type S is seen with it's gear down that one can assume it is either lifting up or going down.
Breaking out my old Judges Guild 50 starports shows the layouts of most all of the starports to require vertical lift/descent in order to get to the landing pads.
In the real world the creation of thruster pods has been a boon for most ships. They no longer need tugs for the most part and they can spin in place or make much more radical maneuvers than with the propellers mounted aft only.
It's an aggravating oversight that it's not actually directly mentioned, but it's just one more oversight in a long line of things that I think could have been better defined, either in a core book or in one of the many supplements that have been published over the decades. It's been danced around but never addressed.