Robert Maynard
Volunteer Moderator
Are we sure that it's 2m x 1m (x 1m)?It still fits in a cannister 2x1m in game.Something has to give.
Are we sure that it's 2m x 1m (x 1m)?It still fits in a cannister 2x1m in game.Something has to give.
Given that ships can transport canisters of hydrogen - and liquid hydrogen has a density of 70.8kg/m³ - the nett volume of a canister would need to be of the order of 14.1m³.
While there might be some degree of customisability, I'd say it's unlikely that significant portions of something like a shield generator could be rearranged trivially. Having to completely strip down, redesign a layout and reassemble a module isn't exactly the poster child of "modular design" and might not even be within reach of a simple agricultural station.
700kg/m^3 seems very low as a design parameter.
Given that ships can transport canisters of hydrogen - and liquid hydrogen has a density of 70.8kg/m³ - the nett volume of a canister would need to be of the order of 14.1m³.
While tempting, I don't think this is logically consistent. For instance, in ships with both a size-5 and size-6 internal slot, you can put the fighter bay in either one. That implies that the (fixed-location) space above the fighter launch door, is not the actual fighter bay optional module. And that's a good thing, because if it were, that would imply that the size-5 and up optional modules have a spectacularly poor packing density, given that there is room for hundreds of cargo canisters in that space. Silly as it seems, I think the most likely conclusion is that the space above the fighter bay door is just empty space, and the fighter bay modules contain the stuff needed to assemble new fighters, and are housed elsewhere in the ship.This is true; there are certainly some limits to the configurations and dimensions that would be possible. Thought the fighter bay's lower dimensions are already explicitly defined by the hangar door/ship models, unlike most other pieces of equipment.
Last time this came up I think we decided that hydrogen fuel is the only obviously problematic commodity. Ammunition - which seems to take up neither mass nor volume - is far less realistic.There aren't many commodities on the list that would be less dense than ~700kg/m^3 and those that would could simply be ballasted to maintain a uniform mass per canister.
Pallets do exist - you can see them scattered around stations, and occasionally in wreckage signals. And the picture and description of cargo racks in the outfitting screen suggest that ship cargo racks are similar, and that our ships include automated cargo handling gear. Who knows, maybe cargo gets loaded/unloaded by the pallet load "off camera" when we're in the market screen. But given the size of the cargo hatch, it seems like cargo only ever enters or leaves in single canisters.Pallets would not seem to exist in terms of ship cargo - as we can eject a Type-9's full load one canister at a time - and the cargo module dimensions need to be based on multiples of the size of the canister (plus structure, "sea"fastening, loading/unloading transport, etc.).
Good point - I had assumed (dangerous, I know) that the hydrogen would be transported as a liquid.This has come up several times before, and I still don't find it at all likely that "hydrogen fuel" is pure hydrogen.
The densest hydrogen storage mechanisms we currently know of that wouldn't require any special handling, cooling, or safety measures could cram significantly more hydrogen into a canister than if you used liquid hydrogen, and would actually weigh just about one metric ton for 1.5 cubic meters.
If cargo is not stored in canisters inside the ship, where are the canisters stored inside the ship (as a ship can discharge its cargo 1t at a time in flight)?But given the size of the cargo hatch, it seems like cargo only ever enters or leaves in single canisters.
Given that ships can transport canisters of hydrogen - and liquid hydrogen has a density of 70.8kg/m³ - the nett volume of a canister would need to be of the order of 14.1m³.
I was thinking more along the lines of the volumetric dimensions itself not being the limiting factor for most modules. This would make the shape far less important because even if it were rather irregular or elongated, it would still be big enough for a module of that mass.
Not when the limiting factor is only mass and essentially never volume.
Even the densest of ED ships would bob like a cork in water, and some of the least dense configurations of larger ships might be even lighter than air.
Compared to the density of the ship, ~700kg/m^3 is very high.
This has come up several times before, and I still don't find it at all likely that "hydrogen fuel" is pure hydrogen.
The densest hydrogen storage mechanisms we currently know of that wouldn't require any special handling, cooling, or safety measures could cram significantly more hydrogen into a canister than if you used liquid hydrogen, and would actually weigh just about one metric ton for 1.5 cubic meters.
Maybe you're responding to someone else's post, but I think cargo stays in the canisters when brought aboard a ship. Just like the pallets in stations are just a bunch of canisters strapped together in a frame.If cargo is not stored in canisters inside the ship, where are the canisters stored inside the ship (as a ship can discharge its cargo 1t at a time in flight)?
That implies that the (fixed-location) space above the fighter launch door, is not the actual fighter bay optional module. And that's a good thing, because if it were, that would imply that the size-5 and up optional modules have a spectacularly poor packing density, given that there is room for hundreds of cargo canisters in that space. Silly as it seems, I think the most likely conclusion is that the space above the fighter bay door is just empty space, and the fighter bay modules contain the stuff needed to assemble new fighters, and are housed elsewhere in the ship.
Regarding ship densities, I found this:
Well, the Keelback doesn't. It's mostly empty fighter bay. But otherwise that's very much true.Either way, a ship large enough to carry fighters has plenty of volume to play with.
Mhh, I think the size is a mile off...I found myself wondering, if each cargo rack is twice the size of the previous one, then is there a shape that maintains the same aspect ratio and can be stacked efficiently.
It's not obvious, because when you chop something in half, you usually change its shape. You have to chose the relative dimensions exactly right. (In fact they are in the ratio of the cube root of 2, like European paper sizes use the square root of 2.)
So here is my guess as to what the various sizes of cargo racks look like.
View attachment 142688
You can't simply use mass as the determining factor for module space though
Here you go. This even looks about the right aspect ratio.One canister can store between 11 and 13 imperial slaves. So a class 8 cargo rack should be able to store 256 * 12 => 3000+ slaves.
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Hah! It's a funny thought, but even the Anaconda isn't that light. Still, if you filled a Conda with one standard atmosphere, it would contain about 124 T of air, vs a total hull mass of 400 T. (With the lightest possible set of modules, 480 T.) But I think we can safely assume that without modules, only a tiny portion of that volume would be pressurized.Even the densest of ED ships would bob like a cork in water, and some of the least dense configurations of larger ships might be even lighter than air.
Whatever additives they put into the fuel to increase the hydrogen density can't even be stored and recycled, as an empty fuel tank has zero mass - the entire mass of the fuel has to be obtainable from scooping.
Hah! It's a funny thought, but even the Anaconda isn't that light. Still, if you filled a Conda with one standard atmosphere, it would contain about 124 T of air, vs a total hull mass of 400 T. (With the lightest possible set of modules, 480 T.) But I think we can safely assume that without modules, only a tiny portion of that volume would be pressurized.
From various descriptions (wiki's and all that). Both a metric or a shipping tonne can store about 12 imperial slaves. Provided they are not too fat.Where does that 11-13 come from?
Close enough; they're octahedral prisms.Oh, and canisters are cylinders.