MasterGwydion
Emperor Mongoose
Just out of curiosity, why is a standard subsidized liner Jump-3, but the standard subsidized merchant only Jump-1?
Probably the same a Cruise Liners average speed is between 20 and 24 knots and a cargo ships average speed is between 9 and 15 knots today, passengers tend to be less patient than cargo....Just out of curiosity, why is a standard subsidized liner Jump-3, but the standard subsidized merchant only Jump-1?
Fair enough!Probably the same a Cruise Liners average speed is between 20 and 24 knots and a cargo ships average speed is between 9 and 15 knots today, passengers tend to be less patient than cargo....
Well, the liner has 200 tons on the merchant, so that helps to an extent. Fat boys (aks the sub merchie) are optimized to carry the largest amount of cargo, and the liner's cargo (aka passengers) are much more time sensitive than widgets (same as Boggo points out).Just out of curiosity, why is a standard subsidized liner Jump-3, but the standard subsidized merchant only Jump-1?
I agree with this in principle, but I am not sure the rules really support that view as it is cheaper to ship things faster in Traveller.Well, the liner has 200 tons on the merchant, so that helps to an extent. Fat boys (aks the sub merchie) are optimized to carry the largest amount of cargo, and the liner's cargo (aka passengers) are much more time sensitive than widgets (same as Boggo points out).
It's also a matter of cost. The average cargo item isn't as time sensitive as a passenger. Merchants and shippers, being the cheap bastards that they are, want to maximize revenue, so unless the cargo is perishable and one cannot mitigate that with some sort of process, you see cargo ships plodding along to move the maximum amount of freight in the cheapest manner possible. Sea-Land built some fast container ships (30kts) for trans-atlantic traffic and Maersk built their B-class container ships (35+kts) for trans-pacific traffic. Both discovered the hard way that not enough shippers were willing to pay the premium for faster transit times. In both cases it was the cost of fuel consumption that made the uneconomical to operate at those speeds.
You can go back and look at sea vessels over the centuries and find similar parallels. It's only been in the last few hundred years that technology has really made bigger separation times possible. Planes aren't any different - the 707 was a faster jet than many of today's jets - but that's because operators have prioritized costs over speed.
Just out of curiosity, why is a standard subsidized liner Jump-3, but the standard subsidized merchant only Jump-1?
Chosen at random when LBB2 was written in the '70s?Just out of curiosity, why is a standard subsidized liner Jump-3, but the standard subsidized merchant only Jump-1?
I was going to say because J-3 and M-1 drives and a compatible powerplant fit in a 600 ton standard hull engineering section, but I'm not going to go through my books to check that assumption...Chosen at random when LBB2 was written in the '70s?
Agreed, but I would assume the opposite causation: The standard hull was dimensioned for the Sub Liner, and was redimensioned for it in LBB2'81.I was going to say because J-3 and M-1 drives and a compatible powerplant fit in a 600 ton standard hull engineering section, but I'm not going to go through my books to check that assumption...
Probably, but I have those original LBBs as a physical copy in a box, in a chest, under other boxes, in a closet, blocked by computers and more boxes. So they're safe... but... I'd probably start an avalanche getting to them. Or sprain something. Definitely trip over something. So I'm not going to check those.Agreed, but I would assume the opposite causation: The standard hull was dimensioned for the Sub Liner, and was redimensioned for it in LBB2'81.
Unless you are planning to upgrade into a seven bedroom home with a usable basement and four car garage.Don't buy a five bedroom home when you're only two people and you both like to collect things...
Books? How very 20th century...Probably, but I have those original LBBs as a physical copy in a box, in a chest, under other boxes, in a closet, blocked by computers and more boxes.
Isn't that what you do every time you move?We dread the eventual day when we move... my sister-in-law joked we'll need his and hers dumpsters, blue and pink, to clear everything out.