Mithras said:phavoc said:Nice animation.
The tail-sitter means it's not as convenient to load as something along the lines of a free trader,with it's cargo deck closer to the ground.
Other than, things look very interesting.
A cargo crane is mentioned in the description, which in my mind would be an industrial side-loading cargo lift ... but I agree with you Phavoc. My all time favourite is the Type R Subsidized merchant with fore and aft cargo ramps!
Having had to experience the joy of using a crane to load cargo (in my case it was an M985 HEMTT loading 5,200 lb rocket pods - and it really WAS fun... usually, except in the mud), and having drive a forklift to load things, I can tell you that driving something around, rather than using a crane, is a much quicker way of doing things. Yes, the crane works, but it's faster, safer, and easier to do the lifting with the loader. In the future I would suspect there would be a grav-forklift version.
There's no question about a crane being able to do the job, but recall the craft description - it's a frontier ship. So that means your cargo has to be dropped extremely close to the hull, thus your cargo vehicles have to also get very close to receive the cargo from the extendable crane. I dunno if anyone else paid attention years ago, but flatbed trucks in the US used to mount a crane in the middle to pick up palletized cargo, like bricks, when the truck was meant to drop off the cargo at a site that didn't have a forklift. That went away because it's quicker and more useful to carry around a forklift on the back of the flatbed than to use the crane. While you probably wouldn't hang your loader off the side of your spaceship (thus your loader needs to always consume cargo space), having a portable loader means you can unload you ship and move the cargo anywhere you need to externally. Again, from experience, easier to move those things you carry around that way than move your truck (or your spaceship) to accomodate your fixed position crane.
And I'm still liking the ship.
