Water world landings

Unfortunately I have ED on an Xbox so I haven't had a chance to immerse myself in plantary landings. But I was thinkin the other day how cool it would be in a future update for horizons that they would add water world landings. Your probably thinking how would that be possible? Well what if they had landable station on the water like Kamino in Star Wars. When you go in the hanger it would take you into an underwater hanger/ observatory. You can also land on ice caps and deploy the SRV and use a drill for mining through the ice and exploration. It would also be sweet if you could fly through the huge storm systems with crazy lightning storms and waves. Just a crazy idea I had, what do you guys think?
 
You mean something like this:

guKOwtp.jpg


Its some concept art that was published long time ago.
 
I think landing on water should actually be possible for all ships. They really don't weigh too much for their size. So long as they don't take on any water, their average density will remain lower than water, and they would all float no problem.
 
I think landing on water should actually be possible for all ships. They really don't weigh too much for their size. So long as they don't take on any water, their average density will remain lower than water, and they would all float no problem.
Not sure if the hold is water tight.
I hope that there will be a special internal compartment needed for taking a ship under water. Some ships should be very good at this - Moray, Orca, other not so good - T9, Vulture.
 
Since most ships are named after creatures that are capable of swimming and the system description for I Bootis, I would hope that water worlds are able to be landed in. Maybe I could coax my MSW from hiding if it could swim around a bit and drag a few transports into the depths with a harpoon. :D
 
To be 'airtight' so that your oxygen doesn't vent into space, I would expect ships would also be water tight?
But is that the case with the cargo hold?
Cargo containers are made to handle vacuum, and there certainly won't be air in the hold when the cargo hatch is open.
Also, a water tight ship heavier thatn water will sink, lighter will float. Neutral buoyancy is needed for a submersible, this is why I suggested the extra compartment.
 
Not sure if the hold is water tight.
I hope that there will be a special internal compartment needed for taking a ship under water. Some ships should be very good at this - Moray, Orca, other not so good - T9, Vulture.

If something is air tight so the vacuum of space doesn't rip it apart, then it is also water tight. NASA astronauts train in their suits in water because it's the nearest thing on earth that gives you a sense of weightlessness that space has.

Something can be water tight and still allow air into it, this is how hydration packs work in hiking packs. But if it's air tight then water can not get in or out, so we wouldn't need a special compartment because space ships are already specially built to withstand the vacuum of space.
 
But is that the case with the cargo hold?
Cargo containers are made to handle vacuum, and there certainly won't be air in the hold when the cargo hatch is open.
Also, a water tight ship heavier thatn water will sink, lighter will float. Neutral buoyancy is needed for a submersible, this is why I suggested the extra compartment.

Slaves would die if your hold wasn't airtight.
 
Frontier had already worked out the basics 16 years ago

[video=youtube;V3rZ8KC5Lbw]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V3rZ8KC5Lbw[/video]
 
.... only to 1 BAR differential pressure (c.10m waterdepth at 1g) - and the pressure inside the ship is pushing out whereas the water pressure would be pushing in.

I'm not saying the pressure would be the same, just the fact that spaceships are already water tight. They would have to be, because they are air tight. If they weren't then the vacuum of space would just rip off doors and suck everything out.
 
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