[X] Loading Deck (4 Engineering, 16 Type-F Shuttlecraft, 6 Cargo]
Okay, so we don't expect this ship to be performing deep space construction with the Pharos- despite us mentioning how useful that would be with the cargo pod. We don't expect to be seeding sensors along the DMZs given the Klingons are going to be substantially more aggressive and start making more use of cloaks during this period. The ability for an engineering ship to rapidly deploy dozens of teams on a planetary scale, to perform search and rescue in the wake of a climactic engagement with the Klingons, or even the ability for an Orb to operate and project capabilities around multiple locations in a solar system at once.It's not a trap, it's just not as good for our purposes (the design brief) as some people think it is.
I don't think it's actually as specialized as this implies. It's worse at piecemeal rapid delivery and is technically worse in terms of total cargo capacity, and likely worse at big engineering projects in space, spanning multiple locations, or just working on multiple projects in a solar system in tandem. To me that sort of rapid on loading-off loading is something a Newton's or even the Cygnus is still probably going to be decent at even if the ORB is suited for larger projects.While I went for the other choice, I do think that a shuttle carrier Variant would be excellent in certain niche situations. However I feel that at the moment making a good all-rounder has better utility than an excellent specialist.
So here's a question. Everyone is going on about the six cargo.
Isn't that compared to like 60 for the pod? That's ten percent at the most, compared to the 30 percent more shuttles or so.
With the exception of the deployment of dozens of teams around a planet simultaneously we can quite literally do all of this with the 20 the loading deck option provides.Okay, so we don't expect this ship to be performing deep space construction with the Pharos- despite us mentioning how useful that would be with the cargo pod. We don't expect to be seeding sensors along the DMZs given the Klingons are going to be substantially more aggressive and start making more use of cloaks during this period. The ability for an engineering ship to rapidly deploy dozens of teams on a planetary scale, to perform search and rescue in the wake of a climactic engagement with the Klingons, or even the ability for an Orb to operate and project capabilities around multiple locations in a solar system at once.
You're going to be able to cover a much larger area in a minefield or sensor net with 36 shuttles than 20. It's something like a 10%-15% gain in cargo capacity in exchange for 80% more shuttle operating capacity. Any deployment that requires a lot of distributed teams, covering a lot of volume, or deep space engineering in general is going to be worse with the loading deck. Trying to equivocate the two is just wrong.With the exception of the deployment of dozens of teams around a planet simultaneously we can quite literally do all of this with the 20 the loading deck option provides.
A not particular massive penalty given we won't have to wait for a single turbolift's capacity to service 32 shuttles, instead having a 16 that can be serviced directly from cargo holds that have already been filled with their mission items.We can, but at what penalty to time?
You can't argue we can do both. Please pick one.
This is incorrect, the only Starfleet ship with a similar capability is the Sagarmatha, which is slightly slower than this ship in both cruise flight regimes and owing to its role much less able to do general Starfleet cargo transport missions.but it's literally the exact same sort of cargo capabilities that any Starfleet vessel before this has had.
Also remember, people were giving an example of being able to unload the cargo in one week or two.You're going to be able to cover a much larger area in a minefield or sensor net with 36 shuttles than 20. It's something like a 10%-15% gain in cargo capacity in exchange for 80% more shuttle operating capacity. Any deployment that requires a lot of distributed teams, covering a lot of volume, or deep space engineering in general is going to be worse with the loading deck. Trying to equivocate the two is just wrong.
Now- that 10%-15% cargo capacity is more accessible, has finer environmental controls, and is more secure- but it's literally the exact same sort of cargo capabilities that any Starfleet vessel before this has had. The value in it is only in trying to combine it with the rest of the ORB's package, not in the intrinsic utility it offers on it's own.
Again, I'm going to assume the engineers know what they're doing. If they say the cargo lift has the capacity to service the shuttlebay, it's got the capacity to service the shuttlebay. Get a good high speed high volume turbolift that can run continuously, maybe even be rigged for assembly line operation, and we'll be set.A not particular massive penalty given we won't have to wait for a single turbolift's capacity to service 32 shuttles, instead having a 16 that can be serviced directly from cargo holds that have already been filled with their mission items.
Indeed for a given amount of time we may actually be able to get more done with less.
With the exception of the deployment of dozens of teams around a planet simultaneously we can quite literally do all of this with the 20 the loading deck option provides.
I mean in terms of the more secure and more fine control of the environment the cargo is held in- I don't know the capacity of our various past ships off the top of my head but nothing tells me these cargo bays installed in the ORB itself would be fundamentally different.This is incorrect, the only Starfleet ship with a similar capability is the Sagarmatha, which is slightly slower than this ship in both cruise flight regimes and owing to its role much less able to do general Starfleet cargo transport missions.
Okay, so we don't expect this ship to be performing deep space construction with the Pharos- despite us mentioning how useful that would be with the cargo pod. We don't expect to be seeding sensors along the DMZs given the Klingons are going to be substantially more aggressive and start making more use of cloaks during this period. The ability for an engineering ship to rapidly deploy dozens of teams on a planetary scale, to perform search and rescue in the wake of a climactic engagement with the Klingons, or even the ability for an Orb to operate and project capabilities around multiple locations in a solar system at once.
There's obvious utility in it, I'm not going to pretend its the end of the world if loading bays win- but yes, we can definitely find good uses for the shuttlebay complement.
I don't think it's actually as specialized as this implies. It's worse at piecemeal rapid delivery and is technically worse in terms of total cargo capacity, and likely worse at big engineering projects in space, spanning multiple locations, or just working on multiple projects in a solar system in tandem. To me that sort of rapid on loading-off loading is something a Newton's or even the Cygnus is still probably going to be decent at even if the ORB is suited for larger projects.
The big reason is see for the Cargo deck is if we're 100% committed to the idea of a modular ship rather than an engineering ship and we expect that integrate cargo capacity to serve that need when the cargo pod isn't in use. However- I'd argue we could still just incorporate a bit of cargo capacity into the modules we design to fulfill those roles.
They relied on ships like the Cygnus to do it, or relied on much slower civilian transport. It was doable, but it involved ether a lot of time or diverting extremely valuable ships to move cargo.I mean in terms of the more secure and more fine control of the environment the cargo is held in- I don't know the capacity of our various past ships off the top of my head but nothing tells me these cargo bays installed in the ORB itself would be fundamentally different.
That 6 cargo is a rounding error for general purpose Starfleet cargo transport. It's for things like trying to shift strategic stockpiles of antimatter fuel, incredibly finicky medicine, or things of that nature. I'm not convinced Starfleet previously had no capacity to do these sort of things prior to the Sagamartha, or is lacking in that capacity given the Pharos are each major AM refineries.
60 is a random number a poster made up, not something ever stated by Sayle.So here's a question. Everyone is going on about the six cargo.
Isn't that compared to like 60 for the pod? That's ten percent at the most, compared to the 30 percent more shuttles or so.
Again, that's based on a made up number not anything grounded in Word of QM. Cargo 6 is twice what the Cygnus could carry.