TL8 Passenger Cars
ewan@xxxxxx
(22 Dec 2019 22:51 UTC)
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RE: [TML] TL8 Passenger Cars
ewan@xxxxxx
(24 Dec 2019 12:44 UTC)
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Re: [TML] TL8 Passenger Cars
Jeff Zeitlin
(19 Feb 2020 00:10 UTC)
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RE: [TML] TL8 Passenger Cars
ewan@xxxxxx
(19 Feb 2020 18:20 UTC)
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Re: [TML] TL8 Passenger Cars
Ethan McKinney
(19 Feb 2020 18:49 UTC)
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Re: [TML] TL8 Passenger Cars Jeff Zeitlin (20 Feb 2020 04:46 UTC)
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Re: [TML] TL8 Passenger Cars
kaladorn@xxxxxx
(02 Apr 2020 03:28 UTC)
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On Wed, 19 Feb 2020 18:20:33 -0000, <xxxxxx@quibell.org.uk> wrote: >Put them in as is, and add an explanation to go with them: I think I'll revise the first and last paragraphs as shown... :) The rest, modulo minor copyediting (which has been done on the text here) can pretty much stand as-is... (I've deleted the reference to "Imperial" miles; unlike gallons, miles are the same on both sides of the Atlantic.) >"Our glorious editor, Jeff, pointed out that if these were published as is >then he would likely get feedback to say that the range and duration on >these TL8 vehicles is significantly greater than present day cars, currently >on the market. And he is of course completely correct (as always (and as we >have come to expect)) ... "Author's Note: The range and duration of these vehicles is noticeably greater than that of nominally similar present-day cars. >Please remember that MegaTraveller and its design system, used to build >these, is about 30 years old, and while it's had the benefits of 30 years of >Travellers pointing out its inconsistencies and then subtly adjusting the >system to better fit reality, it was and still is pretty good at turning out >vehicles that approximate reality. > >In this instance, the Urban Class Passenger Car has a fuel tank that is >probably twice that of a car of today (26 gallons (imperial) vs 13 for a >Ford Mondeo Estate), and while its MPG of around 34 isn't the best, it's >only 4 off the Mondeo in urban driving. It has a range of around 890 miles >against around 715 miles for the Mondeo (with efficient motorway >driving), and weighs about 600kg less than an unloaded Mondeo Estate. It's >also (adjusting for dollar inflation over the last 30 years) about 1/3 of >the price of a new Mondeo, and has 2.75 times the cargo capacity of my >chosen comparison vehicle, although its top speed is rubbish. > >The Urban E Class suffers the same against electric vehicles of today: it's >about twice the range, significantly cheaper with much more cargo capacity. > >You can of course adjust the parameters to suit your game especially if >you're using Traveller rules to play a modern day Earth setting (which in >itself would be pretty cool ...), and I could probably play with the ratios >of the power of the engine and suspension and transmission of the wheels to >see if I could get the stats to better match reality, but I could also >leave that as a exercise for the reader ... > >So while not perfect, they aren't way off, which ain't half bad, especially >given that the rules were published at the same time as the TML came into >being." So, while not perfect representations of the current state of the technology, they aren't unresonably far off, especially given that the rules were published just over thirty years ago." "Editor's Note: The Ford Mondeo reference vehicle is marketed in the Americas, the Middle East, and South Korea as the Ford Fusion. Imperial gallons convert to US gallons at a 1:1.2 (5:6) ratio, and to liters at a 1:4.55 (20:91) ratio." >How's that? > >Best regards, > >Ewan > >-----Original Message----- >From: xxxxxx@simplelists.com <xxxxxx@simplelists.com> On Behalf Of Jeff Zeitlin >Sent: 19 February 2020 00:10 >To: xxxxxx@simplelists.com >Subject: Re: [TML] TL8 Passenger Cars > >On Sun, 22 Dec 2019 22:51:01 -0000, <xxxxxx@quibell.org.uk> wrote: > >>I know there are a few passenger cars out there for TL8, and Robert >>(Dean) did electronic versions of the car and motorcycle as well >>(although his costs (probably the batteries) are high), but I wanted >>something I could manipulate myself to add the automation in . >> >>Because it was the autonomous electrical car that I was really after . > >I was going over these with an eye toward including them in the forthcoming >issue of Freelance Traveller, and the fuel capacity and range/duration >Simply Didn't Seem Right. I'm working on the assumption that the current TL >for the "first world" here is more-or-less TL8 verging on prototype-TL9. > >If you want to add an explanation of the 'discrepancy' or update the >numbers, I can hold them, or I can go ahead and print them as-is (and >probably get some feedback along the same lines as my comments below). > >>Urban Class Passenger Car > >>CraftID: Urban Class Passenger Car, TL8, Cr 3,910 >>Hull: 1/1, Displacement=1, Conf=4USL, Armour=2C, >> Loaded=5.71 tons, Unloaded=1.034 tons >>Power: 1/2, Improved Internal Combustion=0.16 Mw, Duration=12 hours >>Loco: 1/2, Wheels=4, P/W=28, Road=119 kph, Offroad=24 kph >>Comm: Radio=V Distant (50 km) >>Sensors: Headlights x2 >>Off: Hardpoints=1 >>Def: DefDM=+2 >>Control: Panel=Electronic x1, >>Accom: Crew=1 (Driver), Seats=Cramped x4, Env=basic env >>Other: Fuel=0.12 klitres, Cargo=4.557 klitres, ObjSize=Small, >EmLevel=Faint >> >>Cost in Quantity=Cr 3,128 > >Are you sure about the fuel and range/duration? 0.12 kliters is 120 liters, >and at roughly 4 liters to 1 gallon, that makes it a 30-gallon gas tank >(it's more, actually, as it's really only about 3.8 liters per gallon). A >quick google makes an average sedan gas tank about half that (less for >hybrids - a variant that you didn't include); even the typical SUV - which >is a light truck, not a passenger car (except legally in most >jurisdictions), is only about three-quarters of that. With current engine >efficiencies, the range for a pure I/C vehicle of the passenger car/light >truck class is 300-400 miles (400-600 km), which works out to a duration of >5 - 15 hours, depending on speed - but the distance range and fuel >efficiency are better measures for a ground vehicle (realistically, 7.8 to >5.9 liters/100km [30-40 US MPG]; your figures, range [up to] 1400km [875 >miles], 8.6 liters/100km [27 US MPG]). > >The above also applies to the Urban A. > > > > >>Urban E Class Electric Passenger Car > >>CraftID: Urban E Class Electric Passenger Car, TL8, Cr 10,578 >>Hull: 1/1, Displacement=1, Conf=4USL, Armour=2C, >> Loaded=3.713 tons, Unloaded=0.589 tons >>Power: 1/2, Battteries=0.1 Mw, Duration=8 hours >>Loco: 1/2, Wheels=4, P/W=27, Road=116 kph, Offroad=23 kph >>Comm: Radio=V Distant (50 km) >>Sensors: Headlights x2 >>Off: Hardpoints=1 >>Def: DefDM=+2 >>Control: Panel=Electronic x1, Interface=Power >>Accom: Crew=1 (Driver), Seats=Cramped x4, Env=basic env >>Other: Cargo=3.124klitres, ObjSize=Small, EmLevel=Faint >> >>Cost in Quantity=Cr 8,462 > >The same comment about range vs. duration applies here; the typical electric >car available today has a range of 150-300 miles (250-500 km), with the "no >frills" versions being closer to the _low_ end of that (Nissan Leaf, 250km; >Tesla 3, 500km). > >This also applies to the Urban EA. > > > >For what it's worth, and for comparison, my 2008 Prius (hybrid) has a >12-gallon (45 liter) tank; in highway driving I've gone as much as 550 miles >(880 km) on a single tank of gas, and could have made about 600 >(~1000 km) safely. > >RTraveller is a registered trademark of >Far Future Enterprises, 1977-2020. Use of the trademark in this notice and >in the referenced materials is not intended to infringe or devalue the >trademark. ®Traveller is a registered trademark of Far Future Enterprises, 1977-2020. Use of the trademark in this notice and in the referenced materials is not intended to infringe or devalue the trademark. -- Jeff Zeitlin, Editor Freelance Traveller The Electronic Fan-Supported Traveller® Resource xxxxxx@freelancetraveller.com http://www.freelancetraveller.com Freelance Traveller extends its thanks to the following enterprises for hosting services: onCloud/CyberWeb Enterprises (http://www.oncloud.io) The Traveller Downport (http://www.downport.com)