What about a big hot air zeppelin. In a gas giant. Never gonna find you. None ever pulled off a BDZ on a gas giant.

Moderator: NecronLord
Mr Bean wrote:Like you need internal dampeners something fierce. Also it's going to sink. You can't put a super massive giant egg into the ear and not expect it to sink. In fact at that depth the constant interaction between the water table flash into steam is going to very quickly(In weeks) weaken the surrounding rock and your entire bunker is going to start listing. Made worse by the super dense and super heavy SW style shielding materials. Before you bunker is even done being constructed it's going to start sinking like a brick. Trying to do some back of the napkin calculations that results in a weight over over 94,164,000,000 kilograms or over 103 million tons if you were using something as heavy as steel (And SW materials weigh more) and that's only back of the napkin, going with your predicted armoring value ups that by three full magnitudes or over ninety billion plus tons worth of armoring contained in one area. And I might be off by as much as 2000% depending on the materials used and the internal construction of the bunker.Purple wrote: Alright, plan B than. I will post a short description of what I made up based on your input so far and you tell me how you think it will perform.
The bunker is a massive self contained entity buried about 10-12 kilometers under the surface. It's protection include heavy duty shielding and about 80% of said dept (in all directions) being filled not by dirt and rock but by SW style armoring materials. The bunker has complete internal life support in the form of an internal minimal ecosystem (trees and a lake) to produce oxygen and a massive power generator to supply cooling and power to the shields and run emergency oxygen recycling plants. The internal space is several kilometers wide in all directions and almost a kilometer tall.
How does that sound?
What's going to happen is your bunker is going to break up the surrounding rock and sink before it's even constructed or within a week or two assuming a standard earth gravity.