Condottiere
Emperor Mongoose
Solomani Confederation: Catalina Spacetime Patrol Ship
With a fifty tone hull, we have seventeen and a half tonnes to spare.
First off, we give them a half tonnes of solar panelling, which is the three quarters equivalent of five tonnes of power planting. You're still going to need two tonnes of power planting, regardless, especially since it's the budget variant.
We can pretty much ignore bunkerage, but that still leaves us with thirty nine tonnes of volume to light up, which comes to seven point eight scotts; let's round it up to eight.
So with constant acceleration, that's a minimum twenty scotts, of which the solar panelling could supply thirty seven and a half scotts, based on an early default fusion plant, though how that works out in the depths of space seems mysterious.
It's an interesting issue whether we should bother to arm the Catalina; if we do, we'd have to give it a turret, because you won't have the agility to manoeuvre a fixed mount onto a target.
The actual crew consists of the pilot, co-pilot, bow turret gunner, flight engineer, radio operator, navigator, radar operator, two waist gunners, ventral gunner; our barebones one would only need the pilot, a gunner, and the flight engineer. Since it's a military craft, it's good practice to have at least two pilots, and since I've stated Catalina's tend to be highly accurate where they exit, a separate navigator specialist.
With a fifty tone hull, we have seventeen and a half tonnes to spare.
First off, we give them a half tonnes of solar panelling, which is the three quarters equivalent of five tonnes of power planting. You're still going to need two tonnes of power planting, regardless, especially since it's the budget variant.
We can pretty much ignore bunkerage, but that still leaves us with thirty nine tonnes of volume to light up, which comes to seven point eight scotts; let's round it up to eight.
So with constant acceleration, that's a minimum twenty scotts, of which the solar panelling could supply thirty seven and a half scotts, based on an early default fusion plant, though how that works out in the depths of space seems mysterious.
It's an interesting issue whether we should bother to arm the Catalina; if we do, we'd have to give it a turret, because you won't have the agility to manoeuvre a fixed mount onto a target.
The actual crew consists of the pilot, co-pilot, bow turret gunner, flight engineer, radio operator, navigator, radar operator, two waist gunners, ventral gunner; our barebones one would only need the pilot, a gunner, and the flight engineer. Since it's a military craft, it's good practice to have at least two pilots, and since I've stated Catalina's tend to be highly accurate where they exit, a separate navigator specialist.