Fellow ship designers,
Here is a long liner, designed using the core book. This ship is built for patrolled and possibly escorted routes, and is basically a "business-class jet" kind of ship, so the stock model has no offences or defences, but it does assume that most of the passengers will be flying High -- any Middle passengers would likely be servants, ehrm, hired stewards, of the High passengers.
Your suggestions and critiques are most helpful.
Thanks in advance.
Barilaan-class Long Liner
Using an 800-ton hull, the Barilaan-class Long Liner is a corporate business and government luxury passenger ship. The Barilaan requires a crew of eight: pilot, boat pilot, navigator, two engineers, and three stewards with combined Steward skill levels of 8. The pinnace is an added luxury for making side trips and for ferrying passengers remotely.
Routes Served
Barilaan liners operate along the xboat route, typically jumping as many hexes as possible. Scheduled flights will often skip stops in order to better connect more important worlds; however, less important stops along the route can of course be chartered.
Riding Barilaan
Passengers aboard Barilaan liners are not idle while aboard. Just the opposite: the passengers' space is designed for planning meetings, breakout sessions, think tanks, and times of intense focus, problem-solving, and even confrontation, compromise, and deal-making. There is a lounge, several meeting rooms, and a library. The four largest staterooms are double suites with an attached office. Twelve more staterooms are one-and-a-half suites, and the remaining twelve are standard size.
To balance out these intense sessions of work, passengers are subjected to excessive luxury. Stewards dote on guests, personalizing each room to relax its occupant, preparing classical shugiili-quality Vilani meals, selecting music and reading material to suit the guest's taste, and organizing various entertainments in the dining lounge, including booking guest lecturers on topics of interest, popular performers, star authors, discussion groups and workshops, games, and so on. Luxury supplies of a bewildering variety are stocked in each stateroom.
Because these liners are for corporate and government use, costs are absorbed by the company or government. If a civilian had the opportunity to fly Barilaan, it would be because a friend or associate had an extra ticket.
Here is a long liner, designed using the core book. This ship is built for patrolled and possibly escorted routes, and is basically a "business-class jet" kind of ship, so the stock model has no offences or defences, but it does assume that most of the passengers will be flying High -- any Middle passengers would likely be servants, ehrm, hired stewards, of the High passengers.
Your suggestions and critiques are most helpful.
Thanks in advance.
Barilaan-class Long Liner
Using an 800-ton hull, the Barilaan-class Long Liner is a corporate business and government luxury passenger ship. The Barilaan requires a crew of eight: pilot, boat pilot, navigator, two engineers, and three stewards with combined Steward skill levels of 8. The pinnace is an added luxury for making side trips and for ferrying passengers remotely.
Routes Served
Barilaan liners operate along the xboat route, typically jumping as many hexes as possible. Scheduled flights will often skip stops in order to better connect more important worlds; however, less important stops along the route can of course be chartered.
Riding Barilaan
Passengers aboard Barilaan liners are not idle while aboard. Just the opposite: the passengers' space is designed for planning meetings, breakout sessions, think tanks, and times of intense focus, problem-solving, and even confrontation, compromise, and deal-making. There is a lounge, several meeting rooms, and a library. The four largest staterooms are double suites with an attached office. Twelve more staterooms are one-and-a-half suites, and the remaining twelve are standard size.
To balance out these intense sessions of work, passengers are subjected to excessive luxury. Stewards dote on guests, personalizing each room to relax its occupant, preparing classical shugiili-quality Vilani meals, selecting music and reading material to suit the guest's taste, and organizing various entertainments in the dining lounge, including booking guest lecturers on topics of interest, popular performers, star authors, discussion groups and workshops, games, and so on. Luxury supplies of a bewildering variety are stocked in each stateroom.
Because these liners are for corporate and government use, costs are absorbed by the company or government. If a civilian had the opportunity to fly Barilaan, it would be because a friend or associate had an extra ticket.
Code:
Hull 800 tons MCr 96
Streamlined
Self-Sealing
Armour None
Jump Drive N (Jump 4) 70t MCr 130
Manoeuvre Drive G (2G) 13t MCr 28
Power Plant N 40t MCr 104
Bridge 20t MCr 4
Computer Model/3bis MCr 4
Electronics Civilian 1t MCr 0.05
Weapons Empty (8 hardpoints)
Fuel One jump-4 and 4 weeks' power 372t
Cargo 42t
Crew Staterooms (8) 32t MCr 4.0
Passenger Space (28 rooms) 144t MCr 17.5
Luxuries for 16 passengers 8t MCr 0.8
Extras
Pinnace 40t MCr 20
Escape Pods One for every stateroom 19t MCr 3.8
Software Intellect MCr 1
Jump Control/4 MCr 0.4
Manoeuvre/0
Library/0
Expert/3 (Pilot) MCr 0.1
Expert/3 (Astrogator) MCr 0.1
Maintenance Cost (monthly) Cr 345,000
Life Support Cost (monthly) Cr ??,???
Total Tonnage and Cost 800t MCr 414.25