
Post any other good sky ships images you have.
Moderator: Beowulf
Thanks, looks like they have a poster version of that image on their online store.AniThyng wrote:It's from the webcomic alpha-shade. http://www.alpha-shade.com
Where do you think they land?Surlethe wrote:If nobody minds my asking, why are the hulls shaped like they're designed for in-water use? Is there a good in-story reason, or is it something the author simply didn't think about?
It's already been confirmed what the image is from, but for the record, nothing in it looks like anything that appears in the series Last Exile.SilverWingedSeraph wrote:Hrm, this looks familiar. I think I've seen this in a trailer or something. It might be the Last Exile, since the trailer for that looks kind of like that, from my vague recollection of it. But I'm not 100% sure of that.
Looks interesting, though.
That's an excellent question. I guess I'd just assumed they stayed in the air all the time, since they're shitting all over the laws of physics anyway. Of course, if they do that, then I don't really have a problem with the shape of the hull as long as they're consistent.The Duchess of Zeon wrote:Where do you think they land?Surlethe wrote:If nobody minds my asking, why are the hulls shaped like they're designed for in-water use? Is there a good in-story reason, or is it something the author simply didn't think about?
Generally sci-fi tries to be internally consistent about such things. They probably fly through some sort of interaction with magnetic fields ala Tesla wackier ideas.Surlethe wrote:
That's an excellent question. I guess I'd just assumed they stayed in the air all the time, since they're shitting all over the laws of physics anyway. Of course, if they do that, then I don't really have a problem with the shape of the hull as long as they're consistent.
Aaron Ash wrote:I would imagine also that the shape lends itself well to protecting from the inevitable heavy calibre anti-aircraft fire something like that is going to take from below. Probably why they are being dive bombed from above infact.
I don't believe that this is ever shown, but a shot of a transport ship early in the work does show it to have a large ventral bay; presumably, warships could have a similar rigging for weapon's deployment.Dutchess of Zeon wrote:They probably have bomb-bays for attacking targets directly below; it would be very easy to close those and make them water-tight (lots of modern ships have openings in the bottoms of the hull)
In retrospect it makes a lot more sense in terms of the security of the vessel to just use mine racks on the fantail loaded with aerial contact bombs. You're not going to be carrying those into a line engagement with other aerial battleships, anyway.Noble Ire wrote:I don't think that the webcomic's author has really explained any of the military/technological aspects of his tale, or, indeed, expanded upon his main plot and its setting very much at all. For a comic that's been around for several years, its covered remarkably little ground. Still, Alpha-Shade's artwork is quite pretty, and the artist has a fairly good eye for detail.
I don't believe that this is ever shown, but a shot of a transport ship early in the work does show it to have a large ventral bay; presumably, warships could have a similar rigging for weapon's deployment.Dutchess of Zeon wrote:They probably have bomb-bays for attacking targets directly below; it would be very easy to close those and make them water-tight (lots of modern ships have openings in the bottoms of the hull)
The battleships, however, can fulfill the roll of bombers. For example, Russian warships in WW1 would regularly carry up to 400 mines on fantail mine-racks, each of which would weigh up to 1000kg, or 2,200lbs. That is the equivalent of 200 B-17 loads over Berlin, and we're talking about older armoured cruisers half the size of even a smaller dreadnought battleship. A Line of Battle of 20 ships could easily deliver to a city the equivalent of a 5,000-bomber raid by B-17s.Adrian Laguna wrote:The only bad part is it updates sloooowwwwly. I'm currently trying to check for updates only once a month, so I'll have more pages to read.
Though as cool as flying battleships are, those biplanes are superior economically and tactically. The warships likely do have a strategic range advantage.
That would depend on the angle the gun is firing from, and since it’s generally going to be at 20-50 degrees the slope of the armor could in fact aid penetration. However, it would also be extremely difficult to build a mobile anti aircraft gun of sufficient caliber to hurt a battleship, espically in WW1. The largest AA gun even designed, that could be moved in one piece, is the Soviet KS-30 and as a 130mm weapon its not going to be that effective. It’s a 1950s product too. The Germans had several detailed designs for 150mm guns which could be moved… in four pieces. They also had detail designs of semi static 203 and 240mm, and even 240mm twin anti aircraft guns, but I dont think they'd be a very good investment vs. building your own flying warships.The Duchess of Zeon wrote: That would be correct. A curved V-hull shape would in fact allow for most incoming anti-aircraft fire from the ground to hit at an angle to the armour, increasing the effective armour thickness in resistance to that fire.
Biplanes crashed incessantly, even without combat, and they can’t fly very far or carry very much. A typical single engine bomber in WW1 carried less then 100lb of bombs. A flying battleship, even one that could only move at 20-30 knots would be immensely powerful against them.Adrian Laguna wrote:The only bad part is it updates sloooowwwwly. I'm currently trying to check for updates only once a month, so I'll have more pages to read.
Though as cool as flying battleships are, those biplanes are superior economically and tactically. The warships likely do have a strategic range advantage.
Is my frightening supposition I'm now getting, that tumblehome would actually make sense on a flying battleship in terms of improving resistance to ground-fire, a correct one?Sea Skimmer wrote:
That would depend on the angle the gun is firing from, and since it’s generally going to be at 20-50 degrees the slope of the armor could in fact aid penetration. However, it would also be extremely difficult to build a mobile anti aircraft gun of sufficient caliber to hurt a battleship, espically in WW1. The largest AA gun even designed, that could be moved in one piece, is the Soviet KS-30 and as a 130mm weapon its not going to be that effective. It’s a 1950s product too. The Germans had several detailed designs for 150mm guns which could be moved… in four pieces. They also had detail designs of semi static 203 and 240mm, and even 240mm twin anti aircraft guns, but I dont think they'd be a very good investment vs. building your own flying warships.
If you could armor the battleship with about 6in of steel all around, then it would be pretty much immune to any ground or naval gun which can fire or traverse rapidly enough to hit it.
Unless the enemy is either shooting and hitting at more then 20,000 yards (not bloody likely with a target moving in 3-D), or shooting directly into the bottom of the ship, the best hull form would be a triangle with the base down. So yeah, tumblehome with incremental armor is what you want.The Duchess of Zeon wrote: Is my frightening supposition I'm now getting, that tumblehome would actually make sense on a flying battleship in terms of improving resistance to ground-fire, a correct one?
And combined with the need to land in water for maintenance and provisioning, tumblehome ends up making perfect sense. Splendid.Sea Skimmer wrote: Unless the enemy is either shooting and hitting at more then 20,000 yards (not bloody likely with a target moving in 3-D), or shooting directly into the bottom of the ship, the best hull form would be a triangle with the base down. So yeah, tumblehome with incremental armor is what you want.
A perfect triangle would of course not be possible for various reasons, the bottom would probably need to be slightly rounded off to improve its strength, and you’d want an actual deck on top to make space for guns and such.
A formula exists which works off the known ‘normal’ range of the gun for any given degree of elevation and the altitude you’re firing from. However for it to work you need to know the ballistics of the gun to start out, because the key factor is the shells angle of fall. The shell form factor and other factors are of course also required since you’ve changed the air resistance. It’s thus not easy to calculate; this is what we built ENIAC for after all.The Duchess of Zeon wrote:Also, how would one calculate the range of the main guns, say, firing at an elevation of 45 - 50 degrees, from a ship-altitude of 10,000 feet?
Phong and I were thinking about the range you could stand off with, say, the South Dakota Mk.Is (as the pinnacle of WW1-era battleship technology for us) and pound a target with their 12 x 16in/50cal's.Sea Skimmer wrote:A formula exists which works off the known ‘normal’ range of the gun for any given degree of elevation and the altitude you’re firing from. However for it to work you need to know the ballistics of the gun to start out, because the key factor is the shells angle of fall. The shell form factor and other factors are of course also required since you’ve changed the air resistance. It’s thus not easy to calculate; this is what we built ENIAC for after all.The Duchess of Zeon wrote:Also, how would one calculate the range of the main guns, say, firing at an elevation of 45 - 50 degrees, from a ship-altitude of 10,000 feet?
Some day when I have 150 bucks to spare I’m going to buy the book (name escapes me at the moment) that lets you calculate your own range tables and guns….
If you had a range table for the gun like this this then you could estimate your own approximation of what the added range should be. However 10,000ft is an extremely difference, which will throw the shell into the low drag stratosphere much more quickly then normal (assuming you’ve got a high angle high power battleship gun) so this method might not work very well for that,.