Well, perhaps not at the point of making the manufacture of vipers into something less useful than 10% of the ship's volume.PeZook wrote:Sacrificing 10% of a ship's internal volume to manufacturing doesn't significantly impact its combat performance now? Do tell...Iosef Cross wrote: A Battlestar has, about 4-5 times the length of a Nimitz (hence, about 100 times the volume, probably more since a battlestar is fatter than a carrier) and much more advanced technology. If 10% of the ship mass is used for manufacturing facilities, I think that it's operational performance wouldn't suffer much, and that gives 10 times the volume of a Nimitz carrier, just to make vipers.
I find that kind of self sufficiency perfectly reasonable.
Well, 300 meters per 40 meters tall and 40 meters wide is large? If you have a factory space with a 10 meter tall cellar, that gives 48,000 square meters of factory floor space. You can do a hell lot of manufacturing in that space.You think 10 times the volume of a Nimitz carrier is large?
If the Battlestar has 10% of their volume reserved for manufacturing space, that's like 120 times the size of the F-22 final assembly facility. I think that space is not the problem.Try housing 25 000 people (the estimated amount of personnel involved in manufacturing of an F-22) and their machinery in that space. Just the final assembly facility for the F-22 clocks in at 4000 square meters...and that literally a place where they put the things together from parts shipped in from all over the country, no real heavy machinery required.
In fact, I think that people don't know how large such ships can be: Manhattan has 300 million square feet of office space, that's 30 million square meters or the size of a building 1 km side by side and 30 stories high (120 meters). A single Battlestar has comparable size to that.