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Oh, what the heck . . .

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Re: Oh, what the heck . . .
Post by kzt   » Tue Jul 04, 2017 10:08 pm

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I just saw a presentation on YouTube by the guy who was the PM for what became the Ford carrier. He mentioned that the Enterprise had 180 watchstanders and something like over 4000 steam valves, the Nimitz had maybe half those and the Ford had 25 watchstanders and 400 some valves.
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Re: Oh, what the heck . . .
Post by PeterZ   » Tue Jul 04, 2017 10:43 pm

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The Verge systems are developing as nations. Those Verge star nations within the GA sphere will have access to capital. All that direct foreign investment means they are targets for pirates and SLN commerce raiders. To defend against that each system has to invest in system defense forces even if they join a GA star nation. Demand for effective naval ships and munitions will only rise as Verge nations become affluent. Yet, until they become affluent enough, they will be better served buying cast off GA and even captured SLN units that building their own ships.

That suggests to me Grayson, the SEM, Beowulfian and Havenite ship yards will be busy for decades to come upgrading their own ships while selling their cast offs to their Verge customers.

That's the driver for the next story arc; the growing wealth of the Verge worlds and the stagnation of the Core and Shell worlds. Yes, the MAlign will try to sell their Ubermensch BS, but they need to wrap it up in a package of discontent or their BS won't get bought by anyone.
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Re: Oh, what the heck . . .
Post by kzt   » Wed Jul 05, 2017 12:16 am

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PeterZ wrote:That suggests to me Grayson, the SEM, Beowulfian and Havenite ship yards will be busy for decades to come upgrading their own ships while selling their cast offs to their Verge customers.

That's the driver for the next story arc; the growing wealth of the Verge worlds and the stagnation of the Core and Shell worlds. Yes, the MAlign will try to sell their Ubermensch BS, but they need to wrap it up in a package of discontent or their BS won't get bought by anyone.

It's at most a 10 year advantage. At most. Are you going to buy military equipment from someone >500 light years away, or someone less than 100 light years away? Which is more likely to be able to provide spares and training?
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Re: Oh, what the heck . . .
Post by Jonathan_S   » Wed Jul 05, 2017 12:19 am

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kzt wrote:I just saw a presentation on YouTube by the guy who was the PM for what became the Ford carrier. He mentioned that the Enterprise had 180 watchstanders and something like over 4000 steam valves, the Nimitz had maybe half those and the Ford had 25 watchstanders and 400 some valves.

Which is one reason the Ford switched to electromagnetic catapults (from steam powered ones in the other supercarriers). Though they've been having some teething troubles with them.

Having to run steam distribution trunks all the way from the reactors' secondary coolant loops all the way to to the flight deck midships and forward was a lot of moderately high pressure steam piping, with flanges to check, valves to monitor, insulation to maintain, etc.

Then there were other auxiliary machinery that was steam powered in the previous carriers that also converted to electrically powered in the Fords (because electrical distribution is lower maintenance than steam - and they made a design focus to minimize steam distribution as much as practical in the Ford).
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Re: Oh, what the heck . . .
Post by kzt   » Wed Jul 05, 2017 12:24 am

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Jonathan_S wrote:Which is one reason the Ford switched to electromagnetic catapults (from steam powered ones in the other supercarriers). Though they've been having some teething troubles with them.

Having to run steam distribution trunks all the way from the reactors' secondary coolant loops all the way to to the flight deck midships and forward was a lot of moderately high pressure steam piping, with flanges to check, valves to monitor, insulation to maintain, etc.

Then there were other auxiliary machinery that was steam powered in the previous carriers that also converted to electrically powered in the Fords (because electrical distribution is lower maintenance than steam - and they made a design focus to minimize steam distribution as much as practical in the Ford).

In the Honorverse they instead decided that the route to simplification was to add plasma conduits running everywhere, any one of which can destroy a significant part of the ship if it fails.
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Re: Oh, what the heck . . .
Post by PeterZ   » Wed Jul 05, 2017 12:42 am

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kzt wrote:
PeterZ wrote:That suggests to me Grayson, the SEM, Beowulfian and Havenite ship yards will be busy for decades to come upgrading their own ships while selling their cast offs to their Verge customers.

That's the driver for the next story arc; the growing wealth of the Verge worlds and the stagnation of the Core and Shell worlds. Yes, the MAlign will try to sell their Ubermensch BS, but they need to wrap it up in a package of discontent or their BS won't get bought by anyone.

It's at most a 10 year advantage. At most. Are you going to buy military equipment from someone >500 light years away, or someone less than 100 light years away? Which is more likely to be able to provide spares and training?


Depends on getting the biggest bang for the buck. I can see Talbot firms getting licenses for supporting older RMN ships and systems. Bolthole is 70 LY travel time and two jumps from Talbot. Grayson is about the distance but only 1 jump away. Beowulf is 2 jumps away from Talbot and about 60 LY and 1 jump to Mesa. Maya is close to Erewhon and they have that older tech already. Getting support for that tech from Erewhon wouldn't be hard. Those WH termini give access to about 70%-80% of the Verge.

That suggests the SEM can provide support for those legacy systems pretty easily. Having the TQ produce legacy missile systems to support those ships sold to Verge nations is a good way to bootstrap the Quadrant. One suspects Dresden would jump at the chance to produce munitions and Rembrandt would jump at the chance to produce parts for the ships. Eventually each Verge nation would produce parts under license, but until then the Quadrant would have very attractive export products.
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Re: Oh, what the heck . . .
Post by Fox2!   » Wed Jul 05, 2017 12:52 am

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kzt wrote:I just saw a presentation on YouTube by the guy who was the PM for what became the Ford carrier. He mentioned that the Enterprise had 180 watchstanders and something like over 4000 steam valves, the Nimitz had maybe half those and the Ford had 25 watchstanders and 400 some valves.


Don't forget that all they did was replace the steam generators from a Forrestal on a one for one basis on Enterprise, oil for neutrons. There are going to be a lot of valves for watchstanders to watch.
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Re: Oh, what the heck . . .
Post by lyonheart   » Wed Jul 05, 2017 6:18 am

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Hi PeterZ,

The current Erewhon and Maya tech should easily be transferred to the Talbot Quadrant without involving first rate RMN tech, which the SEM, has been loath to do until its confident of the people's security clearances, etc.

Given half of the Lynx revenues have been reserved for the quadrant [1-2 T?], plus the generous tax relief for private investment, there should already be quite a bit of all sorts of economic improvement going on.

Rembrandt already had heavy cruisers besides a system at least 20% wealthier than Monica before it joined the SEM [for perhaps 6 CA's of 38 hyper warships versus Monica's 5 CA's of 32], as did the other RTU members, and one or two other systems may also have one or two heavy cruisers, though the only textev for Spindle's implies only light cruisers, NTM we don't have hard numbers on how many of the 16 TQ systems had hyper capable warships [7-9?].

Given the description of the Maya sector's importance in winning the war thanks to its industrial muscle in ToF, there are lots of pieces of the puzzle we may finally see connected in UH.

Very interesting times indeed.

L


PeterZ wrote:
kzt wrote:quote="PeterZ"
That suggests to me Grayson, the SEM, Beowulfian and Havenite ship yards will be busy for decades to come upgrading their own ships while selling their cast offs to their Verge customers.

That's the driver for the next story arc; the growing wealth of the Verge worlds and the stagnation of the Core and Shell worlds. Yes, the MAlign will try to sell their Ubermensch BS, but they need to wrap it up in a package of discontent or their BS won't get bought by anyone.

It's at most a 10 year advantage. At most. Are you going to buy military equipment from someone >500 light years away, or someone less than 100 light years away? Which is more likely to be able to provide spares and training?/quote

Depends on getting the biggest bang for the buck. I can see Talbot firms getting licenses for supporting older RMN ships and systems. Bolthole is 70 LY travel time and two jumps from Talbot. Grayson is about the distance but only 1 jump away. Beowulf is 2 jumps away from Talbot and about 60 LY and 1 jump to Mesa. Maya is close to Erewhon and they have that older tech already. Getting support for that tech from Erewhon wouldn't be hard. Those WH termini give access to about 70%-80% of the Verge.

That suggests the SEM can provide support for those legacy systems pretty easily. Having the TQ produce legacy missile systems to support those ships sold to Verge nations is a good way to bootstrap the Quadrant. One suspects Dresden would jump at the chance to produce munitions and Rembrandt would jump at the chance to produce parts for the ships. Eventually each Verge nation would produce parts under license, but until then the Quadrant would have very attractive export products.
Any snippet or post from RFC is good if not great!
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Re: Oh, what the heck . . .
Post by PeterZ   » Wed Jul 05, 2017 8:10 am

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All this speculation leads me to ask; will those nations we read about in Shadow of Victory organize themselves into another Quadrant and seek SEM membership?

I doubt all of these systems would join, but quite a few would. If there is enough to form a union, would they join the Empire? Or would the seek membership in the Grand Alliance as independent entities?

I am curious where folks thinks the politics of the region will take the story.
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Re: Oh, what the heck . . .
Post by Jonathan_S   » Wed Jul 05, 2017 9:42 am

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Fox2! wrote:
kzt wrote:I just saw a presentation on YouTube by the guy who was the PM for what became the Ford carrier. He mentioned that the Enterprise had 180 watchstanders and something like over 4000 steam valves, the Nimitz had maybe half those and the Ford had 25 watchstanders and 400 some valves.


Don't forget that all they did was replace the steam generators from a Forrestal on a one for one basis on Enterprise, oil for neutrons. There are going to be a lot of valves for watchstanders to watch.

I'd bet even more than on the Forrestal because the Enterprise needed a reactor plus steam generator (heat exchanger) in place of each of the 8 conventional boilers. Don't want to be circulating radioactive steam from the primary coolant loop throughout the ship.

Though since reactors produce oooler (wetter, non-superheated) steam than a conventional fired superheating boiler does I suspect that the rest of the steam plant needed some changes as well.
Forrestal had a 600-psi, 850-degree steam plant
while the others in her class had 1200-psi, 950- degree plants.

Enterprise's A2W reactor's steam generator also put out 600-psi, but at only 535-degrees. You usually need a somewhat different turbine to handle the wetter, cooler, saturated steam.
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