briansommers
Banded Mongoose
why or how can maneuver drives don't use fuel?
This doesn't make any sense to me. Where is it getting power from to maneuver?
This doesn't make any sense to me. Where is it getting power from to maneuver?
Ursus Maior said:What I find strange is that r-drives and high-burn thrusters from the current Highguard increase in size linearly and not exponentially.
Ursus Maior said:I'm just not used to space and atmospheres change a lot of things.
Sigtrygg said:I wouldn't try and use real physics to try and describe/explain the magic reaction drives of MgT anymore than real physics to describe/explain the magic reactionless gravitic maneuver drive.
AnotherDilbert said:Ursus Maior said:What I find strange is that r-drives and high-burn thrusters from the current Highguard increase in size linearly and not exponentially.
Why? There is nothing non-linear about Newton's second: F = ma.
Apply twice the thrust, you get twice the acceleration. Simple enough?
In-atmosphere top speed is limited by friction, there are no such limits in space, at least not at the speeds Traveller ships generally achieve.Linwood said:In the real world, things like thrust don’t always have a linear relationship with mass/size of the system producing them. Adding more engines, for example, doesn’t increase speed in a linear fashion.
Agreed, certainly, especially in RPGs.Linwood said:This can be true in system modeling too. Sometimes the simpler models actually do a better job of modeling a process or system than the more complex ones.
Reynard said:Maneuver inherently includes inertial compensation as part of its gravitic technology.
T4 FFS said:Artificial Gravity & G Compensation
Artificial gravity inertial compensators create an artificial gravity field directed between the deck plates of a ship to provide a constant gravity field. The generators are also tied into the ship's computer, which varies the field strength to counteract the effects of a ship's acceleration, up to a maximum level.