Ship Design Philosophy

Inspiration: The Lord of the Rings - Warhammer 40K Chronicles

In a universe where ancient magic meets the relentless fury of galactic warfare, Middle-Earth is reforged in the brutal world of Warhammer 40K. Watch as the Fellowship rises as legendary warriors, led by Aragorn, now a Black Templar, to battle the forces of Chaos across a war-torn galaxy. The One Ring becomes a weapon of unimaginable power, and the fate of the Imperium hangs in the balance.


 
Inspiration: ENGINEERING EARTH: Official Trailer

If humans want to survive long-term -- millions of years into the future and beyond -- we will have to grapple with existential threats to civilization and life itself. But we are more empowered than any species in history. This film is a journey far into the future to explore the extreme challenges we will face, and a vision into how far humanity might go to reinvent our planet.




Ringed world.
 
Inspiration: Science fiction audiobooks - The Complete Series MarineCorps | Full Audiobook




It's not bad.

There's a Cthulhuesque twist, that may or may not have been initially intended.

Seems somewhat Forty Kay inspired.
 
Spacecraft: Armaments and Firmpointed Turretted Beam Laser

1. Splits from firmpointed fixture, which allows two weapon stations.

2. You're still stuck with a single one tonne turret, and it's baggage.

3. If the priority is pseudo point defence, accuracy customization.

4. Short range, plus one; beam laser, plus four; accuracy, plus one; gunner/turret skill.

5. Contrast pulse laser.

6. Short range, plus one; pulse laser, plus two; accuracy, plus one; gunner/turret skill.

7. Difference: adjacent/close; modifier four/two; 0.825/1.45 megastarbux.

8. Point defence laser battery type two: one/twenty tonnes; single/multiple salvoes; six plus gunner-turret/four to twenty four (fourteen); 0.825/10 megastarbux; four/twenty power points.

9. Range isn't an issue, since point defence only becomes viable as the missile salvo makes it's attack roll.
 
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Spacecraft: Hulls and DAZZLE Camouflage - What You NEED To Know

How to confuse the enemy; the distinctive camouflage patterns of the two World Wars explained. This is unedited and unscripted, just a Defence Analyst sharing knowledge.




1. I wonder if that will work for us?

2. For visual sensors.

3. For thermal imagining, you could move around the hotspots, in a pattern that wouldn't conform to the normal way it's expressed for that class of spacecraft.

4. The Russians have had a go by darkening the ends, and hoping that their warships are misidentified as something smaller.
 
I would imagine that the various sensor arrays distributed across the hull can be computer linked to synthesis the effect of having a telescope the size of the hull.
 
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Spacecraft: Open Top Accommodations and Hanging On For Dear Life

1. You can pack a lot of spacesuited humans into fourteen cubic metres.

2. External transportation allows more packing in of engineering components into stated tonnage.

3. Presumably, inertial compensation, if it is present, is confined internally within the spacecraft.

4. I suppose you could set up acceleration benches and seats on the hull.

5. Chances are, the ideal hull configuration is dispersed.

6. In the event you want to make an atmospheric reentry, with passengers, the pilot would have to do it dead slow.

7. You could also use a cargo net, to keep the passengers in place.

8. Or, attach the passengers to the hull, with a tether line.

9. Handholds, as well.



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Spacecraft: Open Top Accommodations and Hanging On For Dear Life

A. Obviously, there would be some anxiety as to the acceptable acceleration.

B. Especially, amongst the passengers.

C. Factor/one shouldn't be a problem.

D. Though I would think it would feel like hanging on to a cliffside.

E. You'd have to sculp the hull to have a series of ledges, that can support the weight.

F. Either on the feet, or seated.
 
Spacecraft: Open Top Accommodations and Hanging On For Dear Life

G. In theory, if you could have secure seating on the hull, you could, temporarily, accelerate at factor/three.

H. Essentially, you don't have the safety margin of being enclosed within a shell, metal or otherwise.

I. Spacecraft desant leverages actual spaceman volume, for improved engineering performance.

J. Factor/three should be alright for a (very) short period.

K. Factor one point four for an extended period.
 
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Spacecraft: Open Top Accommodations and Hanging On For Dear Life

L. Factor/three would be a sort of sprint to catch up to a commercial vessel.

M. Most commercial vessels rarely bother to install higher than factor/two manoeuvre drives.

N. Once caught up, a little extravehicular activity to leap over to the hull of the pursued spacecraft.

O. A boarding party will probably take along tools to gain ingress, if the airlock remains locked.

P. Joyriders may consider it the futuristic equivalent of whale riding.
 
Q-ships, also known as Q-boats, decoy vessels, special service ships, or mystery ships, were heavily armed merchant ships with concealed weaponry, designed to lure submarines into making surface attacks. This gave Q-ships the chance to open fire and sink them.

They were used by the British Royal Navy and the German Kaiserliche Marine during the First World War and by the Royal Navy, the Kriegsmarine, the Imperial Japanese Navy, and the United States Navy during the Second World War.

Though legally recognised as an acceptable tactic of military deception, they have attracted much controversy, enjoying only marginal success during WWI and none in WWII.[1][2]

Etymology

Short for Queenstown in Ireland, as Haulbowline Dockyard in Cork Harbour was responsible for the conversion of many mercantile steamers to armed decoy ships in World War One, although the majority appear to have been converted in larger navy yards such as Devonport.[3]

Early uses of the concept

The general idea and legal framework for the Q-ship derives from the classic ruse de guerre of "sailing under false colours". As a long standing element of naval tactics, warships may legally disguise themselves in various ways in transit, so long as the proper flags are hoisted before firing commences. Numerous examples exist of the tactic, used both defensively and offensively.[2]

Examples of the tactic used against commerce raiders include HMS Kingfisher in the 1670s and French disguised brigs during the French Revolutionary Wars. An example of the latter was beaten back by the privateer lugger Vulture out of Jersey.[4]: 183


You're pro active operationally, in that you sail the waters the enemy is most likely to turn up, but tactically reactive, since he has to make the first move.


First World War

Royal Navy

In 1915, during the First Battle of the Atlantic, Britain was in need of a countermeasure against the U-boats that were harassing its sea-lanes. Convoys, which had proved effective in earlier times (and would again prove effective during the Second World War), were rejected by the resource-strapped Admiralty and the independent captains. Depth charges would only start to become available at the start of 1916, and so almost the only chance of sinking a submarine was by gunfire or by ramming while on the surface.

Submarines could attack by torpedo or by deck gun. Torpedoes can be used while the vessel is submerged and invisible to her target, while deck guns are used on the surface. Torpedoes were expensive, unreliable, and a submarine only carried a limited number of them. Ammunition for a deck gun, oppositely, was inexpensive and plentiful in comparison. As a result, submarine captains preferred to surface and use their deck gun on most targets. However, when encountering a warship, submarine commanders could recognise the threat they posed and use a torpedo, or simply not engage.

A solution to this was the creation of the Q-ship, one of the most closely guarded secrets of the war. Their codename referred to the vessels' home port, Queenstown, in Ireland.[5] These became known by the Germans as a U-Boot-Falle ("U-boat trap"). A Q-ship would appear to be an unarmed merchant ship and so an easy target, but in fact were warships that carried hidden armaments. A typical Q-ship might resemble a tramp steamer sailing alone in an area where a U-boat was reported to be operating.

By seeming to be a suitable target for the U-boat's deck gun, a Q-ship was intended to lure a submarine into surfacing to attack. Once the U-boat was vulnerable, perhaps even gulled further by pretence of some crew dressed as civilian mariners "abandoning ship" and taking to a boat, the Q-ship would drop its panels and immediately open fire with its deck guns. At the same time, the vessel would reveal her true colours by raising the White Ensign (Royal Navy flag). When successfully fooled, a U-boat could quickly become overwhelmed by several guns to its one, or defer from firing and try to submerge before it became mortally wounded.

The first Q-ship victory was on 23 June 1915, when the submarine HMS C24, cooperating with the decoy vessel Taranaki, sank U-40 off Eyemouth. The first victory by an unassisted Q-ship came on 24 July 1915 when Prince Charles sank U-36. The civilian crew of Prince Charles received a cash award. The following month an even smaller converted fishing trawler renamed HM Armed Smack Inverlyon successfully destroyed UB-4 near Great Yarmouth. Inverlyon was an unpowered sailing ship fitted with a small 3-pounder (47 mm) gun. The British crew fired nine rounds from their 3-pounder into UB-4 at close range, sinking her with the loss of all hands despite the attempt of Inverlyon's commander to rescue one surviving German submariner.

On 19 August 1915, HMS Baralong sank U-27, which was preparing to attack the nearby merchant ship Nicosian. About a dozen of the U-boat sailors survived and swam towards the merchant ship. The commanding officer, allegedly fearing that they might scuttle her, ordered the survivors to be shot in the water and sent a boarding party to kill all who had made it aboard. This became known as the "Baralong incident".

HMS Farnborough (Q.5) sank U-68 on 22 March 1916. Her commander, Gordon Campbell, was awarded the Victoria Cross (VC). New Zealanders Lieutenant Andrew Dougall Blair and Sub-Lieutenant William Edward Sanders faced three U-boats simultaneously in Helgoland (Q.17) while becalmed and without engines or wireless.[6] Forced to return fire early, they managed to sink one U-boat and avoid two torpedo attacks.[7] Sanders was promoted to lieutenant commander, eventually commanding the topsail schooner HMS Prize in command of which he was awarded the Victoria Cross for an action on 30 April 1917 with U-93, which was severely damaged. Helgoland, while the ship sustained heavy shellfire, waited until the submarine was within 80 yards (73 m), whereupon he hoisted the White Ensign and Prize opened fire. The submarine appeared to sink and he claimed a victory. However, the badly damaged submarine managed to struggle back to port. With his ship accurately described by the survivors of U-93, Sanders and his crewmen were all killed in action when they attempted a surprise attack on UB-48 on 14 August 1917.

According to Warships of World War I by H. M. LeFleming, the Royal Navy converted 58 from merchant ships (18 were sunk by U-boats), in addition to 40 Flower-class sloops and 20 PC-boats. However Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1906–1921 quotes no fewer than 157 named submarine decoy vessels converted from other types of ship, in addition to another ten whose name was unknown. It agrees with LeFleming about the number of sloops and PC-boats. These ones were completed as Q-ships, disguised as coastal freighters and differed from regular service PC-boats. None were lost in the war. The Flower-class sloops were designed on merchant ship lines thus making them easily adaptable for conversion to Q-ships, 39 being completed as such while the other was converted after being torpedoed. These all had single funnels as the merchant ship silhouette was left to the builders. The "Flower-Q's" were employed mainly on convoy and anti-submarine work. Nine were lost during the war.[8]

After the war, it was concluded that Q-ships were greatly overrated, diverting skilled seamen from other duties without sinking enough U-boats to justify the strategy.[9] Estimates differ due to the uncertainty of the attribution of lost submarines, but in a total of approximately 150 engagements, British Q-ships destroyed or assisted in the loss of around 12-15 U-boats and damaged 60, at a cost of 27-38 Q-ships lost out of ~200.[10] Q-ships were thus responsible for under 10% of all U-boats sunk, ranking them well below the use of ordinary minefields in effectiveness. Around half of Q-ship successes took place in June to September 1915, after which the ships were much less effective. With the second round of unrestricted submarine warfare in 1917, Q-ships sunk only 3 submarines, dwarfed by the ~28 sunk by undisguised warships.[11]

Imperial German Navy

The Imperial German Navy commissioned six Q-boats during the Great War for the Baltic Sea into the Handelsschutzflottille. None[12] were successful in destroying enemy submarines. The German Q-ship Schiff K heavily damaged the Russian submarine Gepard of the Bars class on 27 May 1916. The famous Möwe and Wolf were merchant raiders, vessels designed to disrupt enemy trade and sink merchantmen, rather than attack enemy warships.


Second World War

Germany

Germany employed at least 13 Q-ships, including the Schürbeck which sank the British submarine HMS Tarpon. The German Atlantis, which sank a number of ships with a total tonnage of 145,960 t including the Norwegian tanker Tirranna on 10 June 1940, was more of a merchant raider.


Going by the Kormorran encounter with the Sydney, merchant cruisers can be potentially lethal against an unprepared warship, whereas the classical Queenstown ship tends to be just effective against submarines that surface to finish it off.

Japan

The Imperial Japanese Navy converted the 2,205-ton merchant ship, Delhi Maru, into a Q-ship. On 15 January 1944, she departed from Nagaura (now Sodegaura on Tokyo Bay) on her first mission in company with the submarine chaser Ch-50 and the netlayer Tatu Maru. At 22:00 that evening, the vessels were detected by the submarine USS Swordfish, which launched three torpedoes. Delhi Maru was hit by all three on her port bow; following a number of internal explosions, she broke in two, the forward section sinking immediately and the aft section sinking later in heavy seas. Although Swordfish was depth charged by Ch-50, she escaped unscathed.[13]

United Kingdom

Nine Q-ships were commissioned by the Royal Navy in September and October 1939 for work in the North Atlantic:[14]

610-ton HMS Chatsgrove (X85) ex-Royal Navy P-class sloop PC-74 built 1918
5,072-ton HMS Maunder (X28) ex-King Gruffyd built 1919
4,443-ton HMS Prunella (X02) ex-Cape Howe built 1930
5,119-ton HMS Lambridge (X15) ex-Botlea built 1917
4,702-ton HMS Edgehill (X39) ex-Willamette Valley built 1928
5,945-ton HMS Brutus (X96) ex-City of Durban built 1921
4,398-ton HMS Cyprus (X44) ex-Cape Sable built 1936
1,030-ton HMS Looe (X63) ex-Beauty built 1924
1,090-ton HMS Antoine (X72) ex-Orchy built 1930

Prunella and Edgehill were torpedoed and sunk on 21 and 29 June 1940 without even sighting a U-boat. The rest of the vessels were paid off in March 1941 without successfully accomplishing any mission.[15]

The last Royal Navy Q-ship, 2,456-ton HMS Fidelity, was converted in September, 1940, to carry a torpedo defense net, four 4-inch (100 mm) guns, four torpedo tubes, two OS2U Kingfisher floatplanes, and Motor Torpedo Boat 105. Fidelity sailed with a French crew, and was sunk by U-435 on 30 December 1942 during the battle for Convoy ON-154.[14]


Yeomen and supply clerks of USS Anacapa exhibiting non-regulation attire typical of U.S. sleeper ship duty to imitate merchant vessels
By 12 January 1942, the British Admiralty's intelligence community had noted a "heavy concentration" of U-boats off the "North American seaboard from New York to Cape Race" and passed along this fact to the United States Navy. That day, U-123 under Kapitänleutnant Reinhard Hardegen, torpedoed and sank the British steamship Cyclops, inaugurating Paukenschlag (literally, "a strike on the kettledrum" and sometimes referred to in English as "Operation Drumbeat"). U-boat commanders found peacetime conditions prevailing along the coast: towns and cities were not blacked-out and navigational buoys remained lit; shipping followed normal routines and "carried the normal lights." Paukenschlag had caught the United States unprepared.

Losses mounted rapidly. On January 20, 1942, Commander-in-Chief, United States Fleet (Cominch) Earnest J. King, sent a coded dispatch to Commander, Eastern Sea Frontier (CESF), requesting immediate consideration of the manning and fitting-out of "Queen" ships to be operated as an antisubmarine measure. The result was "Project LQ."

Five vessels were acquired and converted secretly at the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, Kittery, Maine:[16]the Boston beam trawler MS Wave, which briefly became the auxiliary minesweeper USS Eagle (AM-132) before becoming USS Captor (PYc-40), SS Evelyn and Carolyn, identical cargo vessels that became USS Asterion (AK-100) and USS Atik (AK-101) respectively (these hull numbers were actually duplicates of the USS Lynx and the USS Lyra respectively), the tanker SS Gulf Dawn, which became USS Big Horn (AO-45), and the schooner Irene Myrtle, which became USS Irene Forsyte (IX-93).

The careers of all five ships were almost entirely unsuccessful and very short, with USS Atik sunk on its first patrol with all hands on 26 March 1942.[5] COMINCH strongly criticized the program and all Q-ships patrols ended in 1943.[10]

American Q-ships also operated in the Pacific Ocean. One was USS Anacapa (AG-49) formerly the lumber transport Coos Bay which was converted to Q-ship duty as project "Love William". Anacapa was not successful in engaging any enemy submarines, although she is believed to have damaged two friendly subs with depth charges when they were improperly operating in her vicinity. Anacapa was also withdrawn from Q-ship duty in 1943 and served out the remainder of World War II as an armed transport in the South Pacific and Aleutian Islands.

The US Navy did not use a consistent hull classification symbol for its Q-ships (AG, AK, AO, IX and PYc were all used). This and the unprecedented use of duplicate hull numbers for Asterion and Atik reflect the great secrecy attached to these ships.

Proposed use against modern pirates
Attacks on merchant ships by pirates originating on the Somalia coast have brought suggestions from some security experts that Q-ships be used again to tempt pirates into attacking a well-defended ship.[17]


Q-ships in fiction

In the Clive Cussler book series Oregon Files, the main base of operations is a Q-ship, a converted lumber carrier. The crew are mercenaries and former US covert and military personnel who carry out missions around the world in support of US policy while earning their living performing mercenary operations.


Haven't read it, but on the face of it in a modern world, hard to conceal in the long term, since intelligence agencies and interested internet sleuths would have likely connected the dots.


Q-ships feature prominently in David Weber's Honor Harrington series of books. Harrington destroys a Q-ship in the first novel, On Basilisk Station, and commands a squadron of Q-ships in the sixth novel, Honor Among Enemies. In the tenth book in the series, War of Honor, Thomas Bachfisch commands a pair of privately owned Q-ships.[18]

Considering that freighters there are the size of super dreadnoughts, you do have a lot of volume to install weapon systems, but the starship is built to commercial standards.

The first we encounter one is actually a Peeps variant, built to military standards, and used also for covert operations and espionage.
 
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Spacecraft: Open Top Accommodations and Hanging On For Dear Life

Q. You could put up sidewalls on top.

R. The acceleration benches would only take up as much volume as they actually do, rather than one tonne.

S. If inertial compensation field exceeds the hull, then passengers won't have to worry about acceleration.

T. In fact, that would be great for a boarding party, since the spacecraft could zip along at nine gees, intersect with the target, and the boarders could just jump onto the other hull.

U. This could extend to extending boarding tubes, while under acceleration.
 
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