Had to finish the Bow so I could measure the decks... |
This deck was fairly easy to do, as I already knew what I needed. Situated just below the upper sensor dome, this deck would service that machinery, house the main communications antennae, and have coolth (not my word, okay?) pumps and tanks for the after radiators and heat sinks. In addition, the upper ring of shield projectors are on this deck, a pair of shield generator nodes, and a pair of inertial compensators. This was the best place for the ICs, in my opinion, as this tall fin would be likely to snap off the first time the Captain order flank speed without them. But enough talk, deckplan below!
030 Deck |
This is not a deck with much human habitation. In fact, outside of the insulated forward sensor substation and the after sensor room/pump house, the antennae and sensors would fry any organics in the maintenance spaces when the electronics are active. This is a deck primarily for droids, and probably not regular R-series astromechs, either - upgraded R1s, with their reactor-drone casings, are possibly the only robots that can service the sensors and hyperwave antennae while they are in service. For fun I used a classic design for the hyperwave transievers - except for the color and size, they are identical to the antenna mast on an Imperial Mk I Star Destroyer. I went with a pair because I needed the lift tube to be on the centerline of the deck.
For what is easily the largest mapping project I've ever attempted, I find myself running out of room easily...
This deckplan turned out to be 15 tac squares wide and another 15 long, not counting the heat sink. That's fairly large - and this is the smallest deck on the ship. And there are forty-nine more. Which brings up the ugly little question of how exactly I'm going to be able to publish this monster? The PDF would have to be a couple of hundred pages, take about six months of work, and sell for at least fifty bucks to recoup even a fraction of my time and effort. I mean, I enjoy drawing spaceships, obviously, but this is my job and I can't just work on unsalable projects and expect to get the bills paid.
But.
I have a Patreon account, and a handful of fans who support my work by pledging a dollar or two a month to see more content on this blog and to get access to my existing PDFs for no extra charge. It occurs to me that through Patreon, I can get the kind of money I need to work on this project, and the Alternate Metaphysics book, and all the other big ships I want to map. You, my dear RocketFans, can get all those goodies just by pledging a dollar or two a month. It's good math; For the cost of a fifty-dollar book, which most of us couldn't justify buying, you could pledge a dollar and keep it up for over four years, in which time I will write a lot more than one book of plans. After all, in the last four years, I've written and published 42 books. That a lot better deal.
If you look at my Patreon homepage, you'll see I currently get $60 a month in pledges. I deeply, deeply appreciate every bit of support I get from my patrons. In order to be able to give away the Starphin maps, the Metaphysics book and the other projects I would love to work on and don't have the time, I would need to reach a goal of about $200 a month. If a hundred and forty people were to pledge a dollar a month, I'd be home free and you would all get free books. We've been getting close to twice that in visitors a day since I began posting on D6 topics again, so I know it's possible.
So that's where we are, RocketFans. I'll keep mapping and showing off the un-keyed deckplans on the blog for as long I can afford to. If we hit $200 on Patreon, I'll release the full deckplans, maps, keys and stats and keep designing and mapping ships large and small, for as long as you want me too.
I'll even take requests.
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