And this is how we ended.Resources:
445R (+480R/turn) (-35R/turn from payroll/dice purchases)
Resources:
45R (+480R/turn - 35R/turn from payroll/dice purchases = +445/turn net)
Anyway, a quick counter to the currently winning plan.
It is not at all realistic about resource consumption. For comparison, this is how we started last year.
And this is how we ended.
That means we consumed nearly 580 resources per turn. 100/turn from reserves, 480 from income. Subtract payroll, and it's 545/turn in free spending.
Our reserves are almost used up now (10/turn left), and the plan wants to reduce free income from 445/turn to 415/turn (reduce percentage to 1% to get 400, use PS to bump back to 460, then increase payroll by 10 from new hires).
De facto, that's 120 resources less per turn, a near 25% reduction.
Meanwhile, our costs have only increased.
The plan recruits a further two dice, which will conservatively consume 20R/turn , but could be as expensive as 40R/Turn
Our orbital rockets cost 35R/turn, far more than Gale's and Beden 20/Turn and 15/Turn.
On top of that, the promises the plan makes are not cheap.
It commits to Big ear and Material research, the two most expensive research projects we have.
It commits to the construction of 2 research centers, the second most expensive infrastructure project we have.
It commits to nuclear power plant design, the most expensive engineering project we have. (Alternative design studies at least is cheap)
---------------------------------
This is plan for if we're planning to not actually launch all that much rockets, because we won't have the funds for it.
[X] Plan Ironically, Not Moonshot
[X] Plan: Second Five-Year Plan
R/turn at max dice | |
Prior projects we shouldn't stop: | |
Heat Shielding | 15 (but only for one turn) |
Observation Satellites | 15 |
Human-Rated Rocketry | 20 (possible cut) |
Photovoltaics | 20 |
New stuff we're promising: | |
Materials Research | 60 (20/die) |
Facilities Construction | 180 (30/die) |
Nuclear Power | 25 |
Big Ear | 20-40 (20/die, but we don't need to have two facilities dice on this every month) |
Alternative Launch Systems | 5 |
2 dice building rockets/turn | 70 |
Upkeep | 45 |
Total | 440-495 |
I had it at 460R/turn, but I'll raise it to 475/turn to give us a bit more wiggle room
It seems a bit pointless, because you're taking that promise to get 5 PS, but the only option we have to actually build that missing point of industry/electrification is to go bother councillors, and that'll cost 10 PS just to open up the subvote.
No? The prep work for the interplanetary missions is materials research 5 in order to make lightweight tanks for upper stages, observation satellites so we have a payload, and Big Ear so we can listen to their transmissions. What else could we pick at this point?So, you're just assuming a zero resource cost for recruiting astronauts, and doing no prep work work for the interstellar missions you took?
It seems a bit pointless, because you're taking that promise to get 5 PS, but the only option we have to actually build that missing point of industry/electrification is to go bother councillors, and that'll cost 10 PS just to open up the subvote.
Big ear is a radio telescope, it won't do any interstellar satellite control. That would probably be an expansion of tracking stations.No? The prep work for the interplanetary missions is materials research 5 in order to make lightweight tanks for upper stages, observation satellites so we have a payload, and Big Ear so we can listen to their transmissions. What else could we pick at this point?
Big ear is a radio telescope, it won't do any interstellar satellite control. That would probably be an expansion of tracking stations.
Anyway, we'd probably also want the assembly complex and launchpad expansions. We're not going interplanetary on a 30 tonne launch site.
While it is a radio telescope, those are also used for communications in exceptional circumstances (Parkes Observatory, famously, was used to get the signals from Apollo 11 and parts of the Voyager missions). As long as the antenna is trainable, then we can use it for interplanetary signal reception.Big ear is a radio telescope, it won't do any interstellar satellite control. That would probably be an expansion of tracking stations.
Anyway, we'd probably want the assembly complex and launchpad expansions. We're not going interplantetary on a 30 tonne launch site.
the actual 'big ear' project was very unstearable, and only able to scan the sky as the earth rotated. It looked like this from the side:While it is a radio telescope, those are also used for communications in exceptional circumstances (Parkes Observatory, famously, was used to get the signals from Apollo 11 and parts of the Voyager missions). As long as the antenna is trainable, then we can use it for interplanetary signal reception.
I am vehemently against designing a new intermediary rocket before our crewed lifter, and I don't think it's necessary to take a peek at Venus and Mars. When @CyberFemme and I took a look at the actual design of our rocket, we estimated that it's horrifically inefficient (which makes sense, we started designing it before we did much in the way of materials or structural research). We could get just shy of a ton to orbit with the same rocket design if our tanks were made to the same performance as something like Titan, which correlates to around 250 kg to Earth escape, and that's enough for a flyby probe. If we need to, we can also use a few sounding rockets as radial boosters while still using the 30-ton pad.
Yeah, I'm familiar, but I hope we can steer it towards a dual-use steerable dish (edit: we're chronologically around the same time as the Lovell observatory, so a really big dish is definitely an option), especially because the Ohio State observatory was intended for whole-sky surveys and isn't great for what IMO we need.the actual 'big ear' project was very unstearable, and only able to scan the sky as the earth rotated. It looked like this from the side:
(___________,__/ The canted line is a radio-reflector, the curve is a parabola, and the coma is the detector it's all focused on.