Travel Suit
Travel Suit | |
---|---|
Tech Level | TL–12 |
Mass | 150 liters, 12kg |
Cost | Cr125,000 |
Mode | Flight (Grav) |
Type | Personal Vehicle |
Speed | 100kph |
Cargo | 0 |
Crew | 1 |
Passengers | 0 |
Armament | none |
The Travel suit (or TeeSuit) is a combination gravitic vehicle and hostile environment suit, which contains a super-humid atmosphere for the health and comfort of its wearer. Versions of the TeeSuit are constructed for most other water living sophonts.
The suit is capable of flight at up to 100 kph. Normal cruise speed is only about 75 kph and NOE speed is 20 kph. The TeeSuit provides its wearer with complete protection from temperatures ranging from -100°C to +100°C, and pressures of up to 5 atm.
A combat version exists, called a type D Battle Dress, with the same armor rating as human battle dress. It includes a sonar amplifier (range 1 km), integral waldos, and a chameleon surface, often set to dark grey above blending to light grey/white on the lower surface. A special snout ram can be fitted, as well as a torpedo rack.
Early versions provide fairly comfortable support for up to 12 hours. By TL–15, the cost has increased to Cr150,000 but the suit only weighs 7 kg, and provides very comfortable accommodations for up to 48 hours.
In all cases, the helmet includes a polylucent cuprothallium visor with a full heads-up display tied into an on-board computer/communication array. This system is equivalent to a hand computer in data processing power with a regional (500 km) range audio/video transceiver capability.
- Loren Wiseman. "Dolphins part 2." Journal of the Travellers' Aid Society 07 (1981): 31.
- Gary L. Thomas. "Dolphins." The Travellers' Digest 13 (1989): 15-20.
- Martin Dougherty. Behind the Claw (Mongoose Publishing, 2019), 36.