Capital Class Ship
Capital Class Ships (CCS) are Naval Battle Class Ships (BCS) of the largest size tier (100 kton - 240 kton). [1]
- Capital Class Ships are 100,000 tons to 240,000 tons, at the high end of the Battle Class Ship range (aka Light Fleet Class Ships).[2] They are created using the BCS Design System. CCS ships operate at the center of battle-fleets and task-forces and include subsidiary task groups, task units, and squadrons as needed.
- They require large crews, major investments of fuel and supplies, and large-scale logistics support. Only major polities can afford to operate such large warships.
- The ships are parts of very large operations, carry enormously profitable cargos, and are parts of very large naval movements. The activities of the individuals matter little on such as scale. [3]
Description (Specifications)[edit]
Tonnages: Capital Class Ships are built using standard hulls between 100,000 and 240,000 tons.
- Vessels between 2,500 tons and 100,000 tons displacement fall under the broader category of Battle Class Ships and make up the bulk of Subcapital Ships. [4]
[edit]
These vary in tonnage and in their intended function or role in fleet maneuvers and tactics. The security of the state is usually the primary design imperative. [5]
| Ship Classification by Size | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| # | Type | Tonnage | Examples | Remarks | |
| 1. | Smallcraft | 0 - 99 tons | Smallcraft are typically Subcraft, designed to be carried by carrier craft.
| ||
| 2. | Spacecraft | 100 tons or larger |
Spacecraft are in-system vessels, lacking interstellar drives. (Occasionally known as "Bigcraft" or "Spaceships" or "System Ships")
| ||
| 3. | Starships | 100 tons or larger |
Starships are vessels with interstellar drives. (Occasionally known as "Largecraft") | ||
| 4. | Adventure Class Ships (ACS) | 10 tons - 2,400 tons |
Adventure Class Ships are usually jump-capable.
| ||
| 5. | Battle Class Ships (BCS) Capital Class Ships (CCS) |
2,500 tons - 250 ktons |
Battle Class Ships are warships and comprise both smaller Capital Primary Warships as well as Subcapital Secondary Warships that include Cruisers & Fleet Escorts. They are usually jump-capable.
| ||
| * | Capital Class Ships (CCS) | 100 ktons - 250 ktons |
The Higher End of Battle Class Ships and the Lower End of Fleet Class Ships (100,000 - 250,000 tons) have had varying categorizations to various commentators. The category is generally seen to overlap both, depending upon one's chosen definition of Battle Class and Fleet Class. [6] | ||
| 6. | Capital Class Ships (CCS) Fleet Class Ships (FCS) |
100 ktons - 1 Mton |
Fleet Class Ships are Capital Primary Warships. They are usually jump-capable.
| ||
| 7. | World Class Ships (WCS) | > 1 Mton | Loeskalth planetoid generation ship. | World Class Ships are beyond expensive and represent suprapolity-level investment.
| |
History & Background (Dossier)[edit]
Capital Class Ships are less numerous than their associated smaller vessles in the Battle Class Ship range, and far less numerous than the much smaller Adventure Class ships. Since they are always major pieces on the game board of Charted Space (…not pawns), they are always guarded, watched, accounted for, and otherwise tracked by significant entities. Their enormous roles in keeping the greater interstellar civilization alive and prosperous are vital. [7]
These vessels are typically operated on behalf of a central government, and are typically not available for private ownership. These are vessels found in subsector fleets and sector fleets.
Library Data Referral Tree[edit]
- Advanced Ship Classifications
- Ship Mission Code / Supraclass
- Ship Type Code / Superclass
- Ship Class Code / Class
- Model (TL)
- Bloc (Lot)
- Basic Ship Classifications
- Adventure Class Ship (Auxiliary Class Ship)
- Battle Class Ship (Bulk / Subcapital Class Ship)
- Capital Ship (Capital Class Ship)
- Fleet Class Ship (Capital Class Ship)
- Size-Role Classification
- Subcapital Ship (Small & Large Battle Class Ships)
- QSP
- USP
- World Class Ship
References & Contributors (Sources)[edit]
- Citation Missing - Traveller 5th
- ↑ T5.10 Book 2, p.31 defines the BCS range as 2,500 tons - 100 ktons and the FCS range as > 100 ktons, whereas the MgT2 Starship Operators Manual, p.6 defines the BCS range as 2,500 tons - 250 ktons and the FCS range as 250 ktons - 1 Mton. The Capital Class (CCS) range is introduced here to define the overlap (100 ktons - 250 ktons). - WHULorigan
- ↑ T5.10 Book 2, p.31 defines the BCS range as 2,500 tons - 100 ktons and the FCS range as > 100 ktons, whereas the MgT2 Starship Operators Manual, p.6 defines the BCS range as 2,500 tons - 250 ktons and the FCS range as 250 ktons - 1 Mton. The Capital Class (CCS) range is introduced here to define the overlap (100 ktons - 250 ktons). - WHULorigan
- ↑ Information provided to the library by Maksim-Smelchak
- ↑ T5.10 Book 2, p.31 defines the BCS range as 2,500 tons - 100 ktons and the FCS range as > 100 ktons. - WHULorigan
- ↑ Information provided to the library by Ronald B. Kline, Jr.
- ↑ T5.10 Book 2, p.31 defines the BCS range as 2,500 tons - 100 ktons and the FCS range as > 100 ktons, whereas the MgT2 Starship Operators Manual, p.6 defines the BCS range as 2,500 tons - 250 ktons and the FCS range as 250 ktons - 1 Mton. The Capital Class (CCS) range is introduced here to define the overlap (100 ktons - 250 ktons). - WHULorigan
- ↑ Information provided to the library by Maksim-Smelchak
