Subject:
|
Re: Defining the term "Capital Ship"
|
Newsgroups:
|
lugnet.space
|
Date:
|
Sun, 1 Sep 2002 15:21:28 GMT
|
Viewed:
|
889 times
|
| |
| |
In lugnet.space, Mike Petrucelli writes:
<snip>
> A Galaxy Grade cruiser would be at least 1,000 mini-kilometers in length
> (30,000 studs) and would only orbit stars. I seriously doubt anyone would ever
> make one of these.
<snip>
Oh, ok, so like a city ship of some sort. Essentially a space city that has
the capability to move anywhere it wants within the vicinity of a star, but
cannot produce the energy necessary to make a hyperjump or something like that.
~Trev
Da ALC guy
http://home.cogeco.ca/~tpruden3/index.html
|
|
Message has 1 Reply: | | Re: Defining the term "Capital Ship"
|
| (...) ever (...) that. Not quite. A giant space ship that only orbits stars and not planets to avoid gravitaional conflicts. The ship itself is designed to hyperspace between galaxies, so hyperjumping to another star in the same galaxy is a peice of (...) (22 years ago, 1-Sep-02, to lugnet.space)
|
Message is in Reply To:
| | Re: Defining the term "Capital Ship"
|
| Well in my Legoverse, the Galactic Confederation, there are 3 grades of capital ships: A Space Grade cruiser would at least 34 mini-meters in length (102 studs) and capable of planetary landing. This is what all MOCs are in my book. A Star Grade (...) (22 years ago, 1-Sep-02, to lugnet.space)
|
36 Messages in This Thread:
- Entire Thread on One Page:
- Nested:
All | Brief | Compact | Dots
Linear:
All | Brief | Compact
This Message and its Replies on One Page:
- Nested:
All | Brief | Compact | Dots
Linear:
All | Brief | Compact
|
|
|
|