I was never good at figuring out how to apply equations to determine volume, so I thought I would tap into those of you who are.
According to the core rulebook, ships travel through jump space in slowly decreasing bubbles of hydrogen that are created when your ship pumps it into the bubble just prior to jump.
So my question is this - if your jump fuel provides X amount of volume of space, would there be any difference in the amount of fuel required if your ship was of a certain configuration. What I mean by this is would it be more effecient to design a ship that had the minimal footprint required? So if you had a 1,000 Displacement ton ship, is it better to have say a boxy shape/sphere, or could you have a very long needle or wedge shape that would take up the same amount of volume.
Now I'm assuming that since we are talking displacement tons for a ship, configuration probably doesn't matter... But like I said, I'm not a math guy so I am not sure if that holds true or not.
Any takers?
According to the core rulebook, ships travel through jump space in slowly decreasing bubbles of hydrogen that are created when your ship pumps it into the bubble just prior to jump.
So my question is this - if your jump fuel provides X amount of volume of space, would there be any difference in the amount of fuel required if your ship was of a certain configuration. What I mean by this is would it be more effecient to design a ship that had the minimal footprint required? So if you had a 1,000 Displacement ton ship, is it better to have say a boxy shape/sphere, or could you have a very long needle or wedge shape that would take up the same amount of volume.
Now I'm assuming that since we are talking displacement tons for a ship, configuration probably doesn't matter... But like I said, I'm not a math guy so I am not sure if that holds true or not.
Any takers?