GypsyComet said:
Allow me to pass along the headache, then.
Take two ships-a-buildin. One is 500 tons, the other 1400 tons.
The owner of the 500 ton hull wishes J-drive performance of 4, while the owner of the 1400 ton hull has called for jump performance of 2. Under MGT, both of these would be "K" drives, off the shelf at 55 tons (its a big shelf).
This is a TL13 starport, by the way.
Along comes HG, page 53. Lo and behold, the "K" drive for the 1400 ton ship, since it is only providing J2, suddenly shrinks by 10% and costs 125% as much. Same drive, same rating, same drydock.
What?
Hmmmm. Good one. Since the actual jump generated is a function of technology, the same drive has a different effective tech in different hulls -and so resolves the tech difference differently. So, yes this is how it is intended to be resolved, and it is odd.
The question then is not "am I reading this correctly" but rather "how can this make sense ?", correct ?
Well, looking entirely within the MGT rules with Canon arguments ignored, I'd say that the J2 version is smaller partly because the components needed to make a J3+ are removed for the bigger ship installation. So one imagines that a J drive is somewhat accumulative as tech level increases. Most of it is Tech 10-12 (as discussed in the rules) but crucial parts are higher tech, but so easily available off-the shelf that most shipyards can deal with them if using standard construction.
However, could one not then pull the engine and stick it in the smaller ship ? It's not discussed in the rules, as far as I can tell ; but my first pass at the issue would be that the engine for the bigger ship is tech +3 (for J2); while a type K drive it would produce J4 in that smaller ship, its tech increment becomes 0; so, since one could not design such a ship/drive combination from scratch, it doesn't work ......its an argument from effect, really.
Perhaps the drive and the volume of ship interact in a non linear way? We already know that they are wierd as they use volume instead of mass, so perhaps the expectation of a direct and unidirectional relationship between engine size ship size and efficiency is what is error
And yes it does have a dose of handwavium, and circularity in it - this is one of those areas where the technical procedures of a fictional machine (FTL) don't make complete sense, I guess.
Better solutions actively solicited.