Gullible Jones wrote:The shuttle is supposed to make a return trip. If it has enough fuel to do that, chances are it has enough to make a safe landing, even if that means the pilot gets stranded.
Incorrect, the shuttle has
exactly enough fuel to land, and no more. The pilot is supposed to stay on the planet until the cruiser comes to the planet during its scheduled visit. It's stated quite clearly in the story that if the girl is not ejected, the shuttle will run out of fuel partway through the descent and crash. In that event the girl dies, the pilot dies, and the men who need medicine die.
Bladed_Crescent wrote:That always bugged me about The Cold Equations; the entire situation comes across as completely contrived. The shuttle carries just enough fuel to get where it's going, and not a jot more? What if...
Like I said, it's a bureaucratic mistake. It's a
realistic bureaucratic mistake. The whole thing would have been prevented just by having the pilots run checks for stowaways before launch. But that wasn't procedure, because some dumbass pencil pusher had the brilliant idea of ejecting stowaways and arming the pilots, then declared the matter closed. Hundreds, maybe thousands, of people have died in real life because of stupid shit like that.
Imagine the following, two airliners crash in mid-air because one air traffic controller had to handle two different consoles at the same time while the radars where in restricted mode, the early collision warning system was offline, the phones were offline, and the back-up phones didn't work. Surely that's completely contrived right? Wrong, it happened in real life a few years ago.
Which also brings up another point; the shuttle has to be able to make orbit again to meet the hyperspace cruiser, (unless the cruiser sends down a second shuttle to fuel up the first which is needlessly wasteful), so the pilot should have had more than enough fuel to land safely. When his carrier returns, he could have just asked for a top-up.
They'll pick-up the pilot and his shuttle (maybe, I think they're actually disposable one use only) using the same cargo shuttles, which are probably gigantic mothers, they use to bring down supplies to the colonists in the planet. This is in no way wasteful because the cargo shuttles have to come back-up anyway.
Sea Skimmer wrote:Even if do you want absurdly elite warriors, at least followed the IJN pilot training model and wait until they’ve gone into middle school or high school. Then you select them for additional technical education, only after which they start military training. It’s just totally pointless to try to start earlier when you don’t even known how the person is going to mature.
That's similar to what 40k's Space Marines do. Far as I know, they don't take them any younger than 10, with most candidates being 12-14. They would probably take full grown adults if they could, but the process for making an Astartes kind of requires hijacking puberty. Though the Space Wolves and Black Templars, at least, can take them in their late teens.