Posted by: xenoscepter
« on: January 14, 2021, 04:11:00 PM »Galileo Class Survey Ship:
Component Breakdown
Galileo Exhibit Class Ship Museum:
--- The ship that surveyed (almost) the entirety of the Sol System, the Galileo-Class has only one ship of it's kind in service, the C.E.S. Galileo I. The pride and joy of the Getsinger Shipyard (Pronounced: GET-sin-jer), the Galileo-Class is, as of the Year 75, currently preserved in a museum stationed in LEO. The class has been succeeded by Getsinger's own Explorer-Class, a much more modern and capable, if far less robust ship which not only finished the job of surveying the Sol system, but now goes to other systems to survey them as well. However, on the topic of the Galileo-Class; at the time of her laying, she made use of a then revolutionary double-monocoque hull construction technique, making it light and sturdy. She was powered by what were at the time the most powerful engines ever designed, giving her a fantastic top speed of 3,375 km/s. A 73.6 billion kilometer round trip range gave her plenty in the tank, while her provision of comestibles was deemed sufficient for a deployment of one year and four months. A high end Command & Control scheme ensured that her potent suite of survey sensors did not go to waste, while her already generous provision of engineering and maintenance systems were further augmented by a dedicated centralized control area. Navigational sensors aided the near two hundred person crew in getting from Point A to Point B with crashing into things, as well as contributing to the data they collected on the planets and anomalies that they surveyed. A cryogenic bay provided respite for said crew in the event of life support failure. The Galileo-Class was also unique in that it was, and still is, the only ship ever designed to feature a dedicated Damage Control system.
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Galileo Class Survey Ship 10,000 tons 193 Crew 1,070.6 BP TCS 200 TH 675 EM 0
3375 km/s Armour 2-41 Shields 0-0 HTK 52 Sensors 1/1/2/2 DCR 30 PPV 0
Maint Life 12.34 Years MSP 3,009 AFR 80% IFR 1.1% 1YR 37 5YR 548 Max Repair 100 MSP
Cryogenic Berths 200
Captain Control Rating 3 BRG ENG SCI
Intended Deployment Time: 16 months Morale Check Required
Getsinger T2000-100T Ion Drive, Class 225/0-45C (3) Power 675 Fuel Use 6.11% Signature 225 Explosion 4%
Fuel Capacity 500,000 Litres Range 147.2 billion km (504 days at full power)
T15/10-5R1 Active Sensor Suite, Commercial Grade (1) GPS 3 Range 2.2m km MCR 196.7k km Resolution 1
T15/10-5R500 Active Sensor Suite, Commercial Grade (1) GPS 1500 Range 17.3m km Resolution 500
Sensor Calibrator [EM] (1) Sensitivity 1 Detect Sig Strength 1000: 7.9m km
Sensor Calibrator [TH] (1) Sensitivity 1 Detect Sig Strength 1000: 7.9m km
Geological Survey Sensors (2) 2 Survey Points Per Hour
Gravitational Survey Sensors (2) 2 Survey Points Per Hour
This design is classed as a Military Vessel for maintenance purposes
Component Breakdown
Off-Topic: show
Galileo Exhibit Class Ship Museum:
Off-Topic: show
--- The ship that surveyed (almost) the entirety of the Sol System, the Galileo-Class has only one ship of it's kind in service, the C.E.S. Galileo I. The pride and joy of the Getsinger Shipyard (Pronounced: GET-sin-jer), the Galileo-Class is, as of the Year 75, currently preserved in a museum stationed in LEO. The class has been succeeded by Getsinger's own Explorer-Class, a much more modern and capable, if far less robust ship which not only finished the job of surveying the Sol system, but now goes to other systems to survey them as well. However, on the topic of the Galileo-Class; at the time of her laying, she made use of a then revolutionary double-monocoque hull construction technique, making it light and sturdy. She was powered by what were at the time the most powerful engines ever designed, giving her a fantastic top speed of 3,375 km/s. A 73.6 billion kilometer round trip range gave her plenty in the tank, while her provision of comestibles was deemed sufficient for a deployment of one year and four months. A high end Command & Control scheme ensured that her potent suite of survey sensors did not go to waste, while her already generous provision of engineering and maintenance systems were further augmented by a dedicated centralized control area. Navigational sensors aided the near two hundred person crew in getting from Point A to Point B with crashing into things, as well as contributing to the data they collected on the planets and anomalies that they surveyed. A cryogenic bay provided respite for said crew in the event of life support failure. The Galileo-Class was also unique in that it was, and still is, the only ship ever designed to feature a dedicated Damage Control system.