What way would they have? The only way to move a message in Traveller is to have a ship carry it. I certainly picture a constant flow of couriers back and forth from each fleet to nearby bases, but if something goes sufficiently wrong, it will probably take out the couriers as well.
That does bring up the point that a Tigress would essentially never be operating alone. So misjump really is about the only way to set up a "ship stranded for a long time without help arriving" situation.
Sent from mobile device; please forgive terseness and typos.
Tom,
Are you saying that even at TL15 the IN has no way to track its warships?
Cheers
Greg
On 12/02/2016 6:57 PM, <tmr0195@comcast.net> wrote:Hello again Greg Chalik,The Tigress-Class Dreadnaught as mentioned has a crew of 19,512 and is on long deployments with a Model/9 fib computer. I image that there are courses that would allow post graduate work in any field to be accomplished by any crew member who is interested.There is going to be a long delay before someone notices that the Tigress-Class dreadnaught has gone missing because of the 168 +/- 16 hours, if a miss jump has not occurred, required to complete a jump which causes a communications delay.If the next port of call knows when the Tigress-Class Dreadnaught is due to arrive and the ship does not show up the port sends a message to the previous port which takes another 168 +/- 16 hours. The last port the Tigress-Class visited sends back a reply saying the ship left approximately 336 hours earlier, which when the message gets back to the destination system the time has now elapsed to approximately 504 hours. If the ship's next port of call was going to be a surprise visit no one their would report the Tigress-Class Dreadnaught not arriving.Depending on how many ports the ship was to visit before reporting to an IN base could be months before anyone notices.Jump Drives occasionally, even though they've been around for a while, still miss jump and if the ship is lucky returns to normal space in a system they can refuel, figure out where they are, and the jump drive still works.Where will the IN search for their missing dreadnaught after a couple of months, especially if the ship miss jumped?The outline that started this topic thread gave only the information that a Tigress-Class Dreadnaught managed to land on a populated world and the native began using the hull as a city. The Referee/scenario designer can fill in the blanks about how much damage was caused by the landing. Basically I cannot give a good response since I don't have enough information to say what is plausible in the TU as opposed to the real world.Yep, I'm copping out and you do have valid points.Tom R
From: "Greg Chalik" <mrg3105@gmail.com>
To: "TML" <xxxxxx@simplelists.com>
Sent: Thursday, February 11, 2016 4:22:14 PM
Subject: Re: [TML] Instant city
Tom,
That naval crew members do all sorts of things during cruises is no news, but...I'm not just talking about learning a new languageThis is learning how to decipher a new language.Such a course today is a postgraduate undertaking, i.e. limited to officers only, which cuts the number of people likely to take such a course somewhat drastically to the 4,433 (see below).Then there is the actual need.I can understand someone on a scout or research vessel doing something like this, but a dreadnaught-class?
Thats not to say there can't be PCs in the crew with prior expereince and service that exposed them to just this knowledge.
Even a 'soft' landing (IMHO Tigress is not equipped with surface landing gear!) would do considerable damage to the vessel's structure by the nature of it's semi-spherical design.
Regarding the vesel becoming a city on crash-landing, it does have a Crew: 19,512 : ( Engineering 10,000, Maint 790, Command 4,433 , Electrical 28, Flight 400, Stewards 612, Maneuver 4, Hi Psg 50, Low Bth 1,000, Gunnery 1,798, Troops 200, Medical 200)
If it crashes on a world where the nearest 'capital' is a pop. of a couple of thousand, and even if it suffers 33% killed in the process, it still produces an instant megapolis of 13,000 persons! The collective numbers of engineering and gunnery personnel now surplus to requirements, led by the 200 organic military, will likely furnish the surviving senior officer with a ready-made largest military force on the world.
It seems the scenario after that is something the colonisation of Africa by the Europeans.
However, it also seems to me that:a. The Imperium Navy will notice a Tigress-class vessel go off the network.b. Any number of the functioning fighters and cutters can be rigged to launch on routes to Imerium bases using onboard automated flight controls, broadcasting SOS-equivalent as they go. Eventually someone somewhere will detect and collect one of these, and identify its system-of-origin. A rescue mission will not be far off. Certainly it will arrive long before the natives have achieved any sort of enlightnment from having a massive spaceship drop in on them.Cheers
Greg C
On 12 February 2016 at 09:12, <tmr0195@comcast.net> wrote:
Howdy Greg Chalik,IIRC most if not all the Traveller rule sets have either translator computer programs or a purpose built translator electronic equipment. My time in the service I knew guys who took all sorts of course some of which where languages.In theory the Third Imperium has had more than enough time to have warships find a world that did not speak Anglic and be equipped for the possibility.The Traveller rule sets on the topic of language is open to interpretation and in my opinion anything is possible if the players agree.Tom R
From: "Greg Chalik" <mrg3105@gmail.com>
To: "TML" <xxxxxx@simplelists.com>
Sent: Thursday, February 11, 2016 1:44:48 PM
Subject: Re: [TML] Instant city
How many of the crew would select a course in extraImperium linguistics? It seems to me this line of thinking is what created C3PO.
Greg
On 12/02/2016 8:20 AM, "Bruce Johnson" <xxxxxx@pharmacy.arizona.edu> wrote:
> On Feb 11, 2016, at 1:57 PM, Greg Chalik <mrg3105@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> A warship AI may have the functionality to decipher languages, but would it have a function to teach?
Absolutely. 90% of non-combat time on a ship is maintenance and drills; and drills would necessarily cover all of the functions of a ship people have to learn it somehow, and simulations would be very important for this.
Also, time in jump would likely be spent on a host of learning activities for the crew: training for different positions, advancement, promotions, OCS,etc etc.
--
Bruce Johnson
University of Arizona
College of Pharmacy
Information Technology Group
Institutions do not have opinions, merely customs
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