Plankwell class Dreadnought
Plankwell class Dreadnought | |
---|---|
Published, canon starship design. | |
Type: BP Pocket Battleship | |
Size | 200,000 Tons |
Hull Configuration | [[Slab Hull]] |
Streamlining | Unstreamlined Hull |
Tech Level | TL–15 |
Engineering | |
Computer | Model/9 fib |
Jump | J-4 |
Maneuver | 5 G |
Armaments | |
Hardpoints | 530 (2,000) |
Accommodations | |
Staterooms | 0 |
Personnel | |
Crew | 1,163 |
Enlisted | 983 |
High/Mid Passengers | 0 |
Payload | |
Cargo | 0 Tons |
Fuel tank | 0 Tons |
Construction | |
Origin | Third Imperium |
Price | |
Cost | MCr150,618.52 |
Architect fee | MCrTimothy B. Brown |
Statistics | |
Images | |
Blueprint | Yes |
Illustration | Yes |
Source | |
Also see | Dreadnought |
Canon | Unpublished, fan design |
Era | 1105 |
Reference | Fighting Ships TBD. |
Starships are designed with the Classic Traveller format, using High Guard. |
The Plankwell class Dreadnought is a heavy warship.
- It is a military ship and a Pocket Battleship.
Description (Specifications)
Modular Construction: Plankwell class dreadnaughts were built using a modular design and construction technique which has proven cost-effective in commercial ship-building. A central strut or keel serves as a foundation, bracing the drives and aligning the spinal mount, while all other parts of the ship are mounted to brackets or strengthened points along it. The technique allows separate construction of the various modules (such as quarters, electronics areas, fuel tankage, and control areas), with a final mating of all the various components being performed only after the drives and keel have been tested and accepted. There was some initial concern that the connecting points would be focusses for weakness in battle, but the losses of two separate Plankwells in combat has been attributed by investigating boards to strategic misdirection. [1]
Basic Ship Characteristics
Following the Imperial Navy and IISS Universal Ship Profile and data, additional information is presented in the format shown here. The small craft factor indicates the number of squadrons (of ten craft) carried on the ship. Tonnage on the universal ship profile is shown in kilotons (thousands of tons) where necessary. [2]
#. | Category | Remarks |
---|---|---|
1. | Tonnage | 200,000 tons (standard) or 200.0 ktons. 2,800,000 cubic meters. [4] |
2. | Crew | 180 officers, 983 ratings. [5] Total: 1,163 crew. |
3. | Performance | Jump-4.
|
4. | Electronics | Model/9 fib computer. [7] |
5. | Hardpoints | One spinal weapons mount. Fifty 100-ton bays. Eighty 50-ton bays. 630 hardpoints. [8] |
6. | Armament | One meson gun spinal mount (Factor-T). Eighty 50-ton missile bays. 100 triple beam laser turrets organized into ten batteries. Thirty dual fusion gun turrets organized into fifteen batteries. 400 particle accelerator turrets organized into 40 batteries. [9] |
7. | Defenses | Fifty 100-ton repulsor bays. 100 triple sandcaster turrets organized into 25 batteries. Nuclear damper (Factor-9). Meson screen (Factor-3). Armored hull (Factor-10). [10] |
8. | Craft | Five 50-ton small craft of assorted designs. [11] |
9. | Fuel Treatment | Integral fuel scoops and on-board purification plant. [12] |
10. | Cost | MCr150,618.52 standard. MCr120,494.82 in quantity. [13] |
11. | Construction Time | 56 months singly; 40 months in quantity. [14] |
12. | Comments | None. |
History & Background (Dossier)
It is a famed warship class.
Class Naming Practice/s & Peculiarities
No information yet available.
Image Repository
No information yet available.
Selected Variant Types & Classes
References & Contributors (Sources)
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This article is missing content for one or more detailed sections. Additional details are required to complete the article. You can help the Traveller Wiki by expanding it. |
- Marc Miller, Frank Chadwick, John Harshman. High Guard (Game Designers Workshop, 1980), 20-37. (Design Sequence Used)
- Timothy B. Brown. Fighting Ships (Game Designers Workshop, 1981), 30. (Classic Traveller Supplement 9)
- Traveller Wiki Editorial Team
- Author & Contributor: Lord (Marquis) and Master of Sophontology Maksim-Smelchak of the Ministry of Science
- ↑ Timothy B. Brown. Fighting Ships (Game Designers Workshop, 1981), 40-41.
- ↑ Timothy B. Brown. Fighting Ships (Game Designers Workshop, 1981), 10.
- ↑ Timothy B. Brown. Fighting Ships (Game Designers Workshop, 1981), 10.
- ↑ Timothy B. Brown. Fighting Ships (Game Designers Workshop, 1981), 40.
- ↑ Timothy B. Brown. Fighting Ships (Game Designers Workshop, 1981), 40.
- ↑ Timothy B. Brown. Fighting Ships (Game Designers Workshop, 1981), 40.
- ↑ Timothy B. Brown. Fighting Ships (Game Designers Workshop, 1981), 40.
- ↑ Timothy B. Brown. Fighting Ships (Game Designers Workshop, 1981), 40.
- ↑ Timothy B. Brown. Fighting Ships (Game Designers Workshop, 1981), 40.
- ↑ Timothy B. Brown. Fighting Ships (Game Designers Workshop, 1981), 40.
- ↑ Timothy B. Brown. Fighting Ships (Game Designers Workshop, 1981), 40.
- ↑ Timothy B. Brown. Fighting Ships (Game Designers Workshop, 1981), 40.
- ↑ Timothy B. Brown. Fighting Ships (Game Designers Workshop, 1981), 40.
- ↑ Timothy B. Brown. Fighting Ships (Game Designers Workshop, 1981), 40.
History & Background (Dossier)
The Plankwell class dreadnaught is a more specialized ship than the multi-task oriented Tigress class. Lacking the extensive troop complement and the large fighter screen, the Plankwell fulfills a more traditional battleship role, as the center of a fleet of supporting ships. [1]
For decades, the Imperial Fleet in the Spinward Marches has included at least one BatRon of Plankwell class ships, but recently (1102), the last such squadron was rotated to the strategic reserve in Corridor Sector. Sentiment in Naval and Sector circles runs high in favor of the return of at least one BatRon to the Marches. [2]
Class Naming Conventions
Plankwell class dreadnaughts are named for notable admirals in the Imperial Navy. The class name is taken from Grand Admiral Olav hault-Plankwell, a sector admiral in the Spinward Marches who rose to Grand Admiral of the Marches and led the defeat of the Outworld Coalition during the First Frontier War (589 to 604). Following his victory in 604, he lead the fleet to the Core, personally dispatched the Empress Jaqueline I, and took over the government. The result was the long, bloody Civil War; Olav was the first of the Emperors of the Flag. Although Olav is in disrepute as an Emperor. Grand Admiral Plankwell is still remembered and honored for his achievements as a naval commander in the First Frontier War; significantly, his name has not been assigned to any ship in the new Cleon class Battle Riders, named for Emperors of the Imperium. [3]
Selected Dreadnought Variant Classes
Image Repository
No information yet available.
References & Contributors (Sources)
This article has metadata. |
This article is missing content for one or more detailed sections. Additional details are required to complete the article. You can help the Traveller Wiki by expanding it. |
- Timothy B. Brown. Fighting Ships (Game Designers Workshop, 1981), 40-41.
- Dom Mooney. Power Projection: Fleet (BITS, 2003), TBD.
- Bryan Steele, Stuart Machin, Dom Mooney. Fighting Ships (Mongoose Publishing, 2009), TBD.
- Traveller Wiki Editorial Team
- Author & Contributor: Lord (Marquis) and Master of Sophontology Maksim-Smelchak of the Ministry of Science
- ↑ Timothy B. Brown. Fighting Ships (Game Designers Workshop, 1981), 40.
- ↑ Timothy B. Brown. Fighting Ships (Game Designers Workshop, 1981), 40.
- ↑ Timothy B. Brown. Fighting Ships (Game Designers Workshop, 1981), 40.