Death Star

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Darth Ruinus
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Post by Darth Ruinus »

Hey guys, not to take away from this debate, but, I was checking starfleetjedi, and this "Who is God like arbour" guy quoted me as saying
So, does that mean that reasonable and intelligent Star Trek fans like JMSpock
I NEVER EVER said reasonable and intelligent, I said TREKTARDS. I hope someone from that site sees this message, because I certainly do NOT like being misquoted.

Sorry, but it really got me mad. :D
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Post by Illuminatus Primus »

Basic empiricism is all that's needed; even with this book we know they generate the requisite quantities of main reactor power to directly contribute the prime weapon's firepower, so any "extra-dimensional" drivel is negligible or irrelevant. Therefore it can be discarded as insignificant.
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Post by Ritterin Sophia »

Darth Ruinus wrote:Hey guys, not to take away from this debate, but, I was checking starfleetjedi, and this "Who is God like arbour" guy quoted me as saying
So, does that mean that reasonable and intelligent Star Trek fans like JMSpock
I NEVER EVER said reasonable and intelligent, I said TREKTARDS. I hope someone from that site sees this message, because I certainly do NOT like being misquoted.

Sorry, but it really got me mad. :D
Their board is Net Nannified to turn insults into really stupid shit, I wouldn't doubt if they modified the software to make it do that. :roll:

Really, I find Trekkies in general dishonest since they won't say what they obviously want to, and thus hide it in some passive-aggressive style-over-substance bullshit.
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Post by Vehrec »

Ender wrote:Here's the odd thing about the hyperspace energy thing - the reactors are still credited with being incredibly powerful. the HM reactor on the Death Star is stated to be as powerful as a weeks output of several main sequence stars. A single G-1 star for a week is 1.8*10^32, so several of them would be the 10^33 the main reactor is usually put at. They have the power, but have the weapon draw more from hyperspace anyways.

IIRC, the upperlimit on the beam, based off some of the fluff, is 10^41 joules. So I guess the "punching a hole to hyperspace" bit doesn't contradict the momentum shift we see in Alderaan. And I admit, tying the wake we see when ships jump to hyperspace with the ring is interesting. BUt still, it is a total disconnect for me.
You know, the ring might just be the effect of a massive discharge of energy. Hyperspace is very exotic, and maybe the combined output of serveral stars is enough to break the laws of physics and temporarily create regions where it intersects with reality. No way to tell what happens then.
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Post by Cyborg Stan »

You know, I sorta remember the DS also blowing up with a ring effect. Which would sort of imply that it too, has an hyperspace energy wormhole. Which means that the DS wouldn't be limited by the mass-energy it holds either. Which is the entire point of having the beam open up a hyperspace energy wormhole in the first place.

EDIT : To note, the rings would be of different sizes, given the size differences between Alderaan, DS1 and DS2, which may imply different energy levels. That being said, the reasoning given for the wormholes is needlessly self-contradictory.
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Post by Connor MacLeod »

Ender wrote:Here's the odd thing about the hyperspace energy thing - the reactors are still credited with being incredibly powerful. the HM reactor on the Death Star is stated to be as powerful as a weeks output of several main sequence stars. A single G-1 star for a week is 1.8*10^32, so several of them would be the 10^33 the main reactor is usually put at. They have the power, but have the weapon draw more from hyperspace anyways.

IIRC, the upperlimit on the beam, based off some of the fluff, is 10^41 joules. So I guess the "punching a hole to hyperspace" bit doesn't contradict the momentum shift we see in Alderaan. And I admit, tying the wake we see when ships jump to hyperspace with the ring is interesting. BUt still, it is a total disconnect for me.
I just picked up the novel. My reading is that for some reason, they just decided that a large amount of the planet's mass was accelerated into hyperspace (maybe there is a lack of debris, I don't know.)

Before we start raining down on these people for being pseudoscientific assholes, maybe we should consider what is implied in the passage (I'll try to quote it later.) Basically, a lage portion of the planet's mass was dumped into hyperspace. Not that long ago you yourself Ender made a thread dealing with power output based on the relatavistic acceleration to lightspeed (which we can observe in various EU novels like Bloodlines, Hutt Gambit, etc.) Understandably, dumping a large chunk of a planet into hyperspace (for whatever reason) ought to take a fuckload of energy, because you're accelerating that mass to near-c.

More to the point, that energy STILL has to come from somewhere (which is indicated to be the Death Star, which shoudl be obvious.) So in reality, if it does anything, it probably INCREASES the power requirements.

As to why they need to dump the ship into hyperspace? Out of universe, I suspect they've been following the DK books (I'll comment on this later, since there's some other interesting tidbits to mention) and they probably noted the fact that hypermatter is used in both the reactors as well as in hyperspace travel. They do not seem to have reached the conclusion Curtis would have, but let's be blunt. Alot of people beforehand (even on this boarD) have speculated on similar things (or at least things just as absurd.)

In universe I'd just guess that maybe it has something to do with how the energy is dumped into the planet. Maybe the superlaser is meant to accelerate different parts of the planet at different rates - I imagine that would put it udner alot of stress and rip it apartt more nasty like. And, under the interpretation of hyperspace they seem to use, its quite likely that the planetary debris would be impossible to recover (hyperspace having destructive effects is not new, even under Curtis's POV of Hyperspace.)

And in final note, I will also add there are quite a number of passages still indicating the superlaser is also "brute force" - the "hyperspacee" effect seems to be largely the reasoning for the "combination" effect, as far as I can tlel (I need to read more clsoely to figure that out.) When they go over the destruction of Despayre, I recalled no mention of the magic ring. (Which is okay anyhow, the only visuals we have of Despayer's death have no magical hyperspace shockwave either.)

Thus, what they've presented us with is basically just a more "magical/exotic" superlaser - its not exactly as if the nature or properties of turbolasers have been precisely defined (or at least consistently defined.) Hell, undert his idea superlasers can have a multi-dimesnional "hyperspacE" effect which SW shields must be expected to block. It's still got the raw energy, its just got an odd mechanism added to it.

And if the trektards want to haul this out, we just point out that the multi-dimensional implications would prove that ST shields can't block superlasers (or turbolasers, since they're related technologies.) Still goofy, ,but its nowhere near some of the catastrophes others (say Sarli) have tried cooking up.

I'd also note this might provide an additional reason to put forth as to why there was still some solid debris left over after Alderaan's explosion (aside from the planetary shield, that is.).

I am also going to bloody point out that based on the Alderaan destruction bit, it indicates that Hypermatter reactions seem to be as efficient or MORE efficient than annihilation reactions, which ACTUALLY allows us to more precisely calculate the power output of the ROTS ICS vessels (like the Venator, which also puts a crimp in Sarli's nonsense.) This is also wonky, but its again no less problematic than "massively insanely dense fuel tanks that are shielded against their gravitational effects.") From what I'd guess they just decided hypermatter was a ripoff of Stargate Naquadah or something.
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Post by Connor MacLeod »

Lord Poe wrote:Sigh... I have a shitty feeling this "hyperspace energy transfer" thing was put in to justify the "Glove Of Darth Vader" wormhole. :wanker:
You're feeling is probably wrong then. They portray the hyperspace effect as being a parrt of the destructive effects of the superlaser on Alderaan. Moreover, its not making a wormhole (where the fuck would Alderaan come out?), its just dumping a fuckload of the mass (unprotected) into hyperspace, which is goign to be pretty destructive regardless (and why would you deliberately shield something you're trying to destroy anyhow?)

So basically, if any GDV wanking moron wants to use this to claim that Vader's glove could have survived, they'd STILL have to explain how and why the superlaser would magically shield said glove from its own destructive effects. (It's actually harder to use than the hyperdrive malfunction wank they've floated before.)
I wonder if Curtis has time to read this?
I'm actually kinda hoping not. I don't think he'd be too happy with some of the conclusions. There is some stuff he'd like in there though (They didn't recycle the WEG ISD armament figures, for example. They also made extensive mention of the Death Star being connected ot the "Great Weapon", and that there were numerous setbacks and problems plaguing the project - up to the point they actually relocated the entire thing more than once to avoid the Rebels. There's a 3 km rebel "Carrier" holding IIRC hundreds of fighters, there's mention of ISDs using a hypermatter reactor, etc..)

The superlaser and hypermatter stuff might give him a heart attack, though.
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Post by Connor MacLeod »

QuentinGeorge wrote:
Perry also did Shadows of the Empire, for what it's worth.


YEah I know, but my point was, these guys IIRC have a history of referencing some of the DK stuff. They're one of thwe few authors, for example, who actually embrace the idea that Curtis does that all blaster/laser weapons are massless beams (even the hand blasters.)

There's also some other stuff.. they really ramp up the Death STar's armament beyond just TLS and ion cannons and shit. They mention magnetic accelerators/railguns of some kind, and particle beam weapons (distinct from turbolasers, I'd note.)

There's already the stuff I mentioned (ISDs having hypermatter reactors, mention of the six HTL turrets and 2 heavy ion turrets rather than the 60 TL/60 Ion cannon armament., etc.)

The only real problem yet I've found is some of the implied firepower for star destroyers. Ender mentioned the asteroid one which isn't as much of a problem, but there's another implied about "boiling off" an large lake or small sea (implied to be beyond ISD capability.)
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Post by nightmare »

SWTC wrote:Possible fuels might include:
* hypermatter, consisting of intrinsically faster-than-light subatomic particles, which must release all of their mass-energy as they accelerate towards infinite speed;
sd.net wrote:The Death Star requires no onboard fuel." This theory would require that it can somehow draw mass/energy from a source outside of itself, such as the theoretical vacuum zero-point energy of the universe, a source of mass/energy in hyperspace, or a distant source such as a quasar or black hole (presumably connected to the Death Star's hypermatter reactor through some kind of wormhole).
I figure the authors have read up on DS theories such as these and tried to explain the otherwise unexplainable ring explosion. They were also smart enough to leave ambiguity when writing about a subject they don't know about scientifically, at least that's what it seems like. Actual quotes will perchance allow for a better conclusion of what it means.
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Post by Connor MacLeod »

To be perfectly blunt, that did occur to me, but I kinda doubt it. Some of those possibilities are implied in the DK materials, but Curtis (for whatever reason) was unable to elaborate the way he does on his website. Curtis "intent" is rather plain on his website.

Although again, its not exactly unusual for someon who agrees with Currtis to have developed different conclusions or ideas from what Curtis may or may not intend. It's hardly a major sin.

Edit: I also forgot to mention Daala makes an appearance in some parts I believe, but whether this is good or bad remains to be seen. I will note that it did seem that Tarkin thought Daala might have risen in rank on her own merit had he not accelerated her promition for his own puproses. This would rather make Daala's later ranting about how the Empire held her back mere bitterness and excuses.
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Post by Darth Ruinus »

Connor MacLeod said something that remembered me of, something else.

The part of the SL being mutli-dimensional, I remember hearing that SW shields are mutli-dimensional, which I guess makes sense, since theres that accident where 3 ISDs hit an Executor while in hyperspace (and the Executor was in realspace) the shields blocked the damage.

Still, I just want a little comfirmation on this, I dont want to say stuff that is unfounded.

So, are SW shields mutli-dimensional?
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Post by Connor MacLeod »

the idea that hyperspace is multi-dimensional (as in being like B5 hyperspace, a separate "dimension") is something that features in this book. It is also a longtime holdover from WEG and something that appears commonly in different novels (EG Black Fleet Crisis.)

It should be noted this is NOT how Curtis envisioned hyperspace as per the movies. The only author I can even vaguely remember following his idea of hyperspace might have been Denning circa Star By Star/Tattooine Ghost.

Edit: Sw shields would not be "multi-dimensional" as per how Curttis envisions it, sincee hyperspace isn't a dimension. By the "popular" (IE WEG inspired) approach (disregarding problemsl ike how objects in another dimension interact with realspace), it would be possible. I simply mentioned it as a possible consequencee of the whole "Hyperspace component" to the superlaser, if the trektards try to argue that its a magical shortcut like phasers have (and Scooter pretends exists.)
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Post by Darth Ruinus »

Connor MacLeod wrote:the idea that hyperspace is multi-dimensional (as in being like B5 hyperspace, a separate "dimension") is something that features in this book. It is also a longtime holdover from WEG and something that appears commonly in different novels (EG Black Fleet Crisis.)

It should be noted this is NOT how Curtis envisioned hyperspace as per the movies. The only author I can even vaguely remember following his idea of hyperspace might have been Denning circa Star By Star/Tattooine Ghost.

Edit: Sw shields would not be "multi-dimensional" as per how Curttis envisions it, sincee hyperspace isn't a dimension. By the "popular" (IE WEG inspired) approach (disregarding problemsl ike how objects in another dimension interact with realspace), it would be possible. I simply mentioned it as a possible consequencee of the whole "Hyperspace component" to the superlaser, if the trektards try to argue that its a magical shortcut like phasers have (and Scooter pretends exists.)
Ok, Im a little confused, so Curtis' envision is the correct version of hyperspace, or the most credible one or?

From your comment, I got the idea that more people support the hyperspace is an alternate dimension idea, clarification please?
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Post by Vympel »

The more I hear about the book, I gotta say, the more it sounds like it'd be a good read. The technical stuff sounds nice, and the Death Star stuff bothers me not very much at all.
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Post by Connor MacLeod »

Darth Ruinus wrote:Ok, Im a little confused, so Curtis' envision is the correct version of hyperspace, or the most credible one or?

From your comment, I got the idea that more people support the hyperspace is an alternate dimension idea, clarification please?
the WEG interpretation is the "official" one insofar as the novels and the like go, and probably what most people (like the fanboys on TFN or SW.com) believe.

There are, ,as I said, problems with the WEG interpretation, however. Curtis's obsevations and interpretations from the movie are that Hyperspace is not a "dimension", its just the way people view realspace while traveling FTL (In other words, you're traveling FTL in realspace.) which allows for the sots of collisions and impacts talked about in ANH. This is very rarely considered or discussed in the EU, if ever. Most people (around here) tend to consider it the more consistent theory because it is.
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Post by Darth Ruinus »

Connor MacLeod wrote:
Darth Ruinus wrote:Ok, Im a little confused, so Curtis' envision is the correct version of hyperspace, or the most credible one or?

From your comment, I got the idea that more people support the hyperspace is an alternate dimension idea, clarification please?
the WEG interpretation is the "official" one insofar as the novels and the like go, and probably what most people (like the fanboys on TFN or SW.com) believe.

There are, ,as I said, problems with the WEG interpretation, however. Curtis's obsevations and interpretations from the movie are that Hyperspace is not a "dimension", its just the way people view realspace while traveling FTL (In other words, you're traveling FTL in realspace.) which allows for the sots of collisions and impacts talked about in ANH. This is very rarely considered or discussed in the EU, if ever. Most people (around here) tend to consider it the more consistent theory because it is.
Mmmh, that actually makes more sense than the alternate dimesion thing, since I always wondered why objects like planets and such could interact with hypertravelling objects.

Thank you for your clarification and patience.
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Post by VT-16 »

According to the discussion thread on TFN, there's a SSD type mentioned which is between 8 and 10 times the size of an ISD (i.e between 12,8 and 16 km long). That's the second new SSD in two weeks. And to think, it used to be years in between mentions of Executor-class ships alone.
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Post by ArcturusMengsk »

Interesting passages in the book. Spoilers ahoy:















Military Matters:
Command always said it didn't matter which unit you got. TIE fighters were all the same, down to the last nut and bolt, but even so, every pilot had his or her favorite ship. You weren't supposed to personalize them, of course...
- Imperial TIE fighters are completely standardized.
The Empire was determined to erase all signs of individuality in its pilots, on the absurd theory that nameless, faceless operators were somehow more effective. Thus the classification numbers, the anonymous flight suits and helmets, and the random rotation of spacecraft. The standardizing approach had worked reasonably well in the Clone Wars, but there was one important difference here: neither Vil nor any of the other TIE pilots he knew of was a clone.
- Self-explanatory. It seems to be implied that all the clone pilots are gone by the time of A New Hope.
IMSLO stood for "Imperial Military Stop Loss Order." Too many skilled people who'd been drafted had had enough of the military after the Clone Wars, and when their compulsory service ended, wanted nothing more than to go home. With the action against the Rebels heating up, the Empire couldn't allow that. Doctors, in particular, were in short supply; hence, IMSLO. A retroactive order mandating that, no matter when you'd been conscripted, you were in for as long as they wanted you - or until you got killed. Either way, it was kiss your planned life goodbye.
- Self-explanatory
If you took a guard hostage and tried to use him or her or it for leverage, it got you and the guard and anybody within a hundred meters turned into a smoking crater. No negotiation, no compromise, just a big, sleek thermal bomb arcing out of the compound and onto your position. You couldn't hide, because the bomb zeroed in on the guard's implant, which couldn't be turned off or destroyed unless you knew exactly where it was, and that location was different for every guard on the planet.
- An interesting description of a "smart bomb", of sorts.
Only a few dozen Givins had been conscripted, but their ability to survive for short periods, unsuited, in hard vacuum, even more than their aptitude for juggling integers, had resulted in more favored treatment than most other nonhumanoids got from the Empire.
- Apparently, species-related bias doesn't apply to those species with super-human abilities.


Technical Issues:
Lemelisk had disappointed him in that instance. The greatest challenge in designing the battle station, he had said, was not creating a beam cannon big enough to destroy a planet, nor was it building a moon-sized station that would be driven by a Class Three hyperdrive. The greatest challenge was powering both of them. There must be trade-offs, he had said. In order to mount a weapon of mundicidal means, shielding capabilities would have to be downgraded to a rudimentary level. Power, Bevel said, was not infinite, not even on a station this size, fueled by the largest hypermatter reactor ever built. However, given the surface-to-vacuum defenses, the number of fighters, turbolaser batteries, charged-particle blasters, magnetic railguns, proton torpedo banks, ion cannons, and a host of other protective devices, no naval ship of any size would be even a remote thread.
- Self-explanatory.
Spice smuggling by itself usually wasn't enough to rate a trip to the prison planet for a life sentence, but Balahteez had been involved in an unfortunate accident while being pursued by an Imperial patrol near the Zharan moon Gall. Realizing that his ship would soon be overtaken by the navy gunboat chasing him, Balahteez had jettisoned his illegal cargo. The drug, packed securely in a block of carbonite the size of a luggage trunk, had hurtled down Gall's gravity well and punched a large hole in the outer hull of a barracks housing a large unit of TIE fighter mechanics. The hole was big enough that thirty of the hapless mechanics had been blown through it and into vacuum by the explosive decompression, and a dozen more had run out of air before the emergency and repair droids could reseal the compartment. Not to mention the other fifty or so who had died immediately from the impact; the carbonite block had been traveling at about two kilometers a second and had left a crater thirty meters in diameter.
- Can anybody calc this?

"... Beams of coherent particles, such as electrons, positrons, and the like, as well as amplified photon emissions, are often focused with large magnetic rings. Let us postulate that one could, in this fashion, generate a weaponized beam with enough force to blow a large asteroid apart with a single blast."

"Is there such a thing?"

"In theory, yes, though it requires a power source so large as to be impractical to perambulate, even on a Star Destroyer. But," Balahteez continued, raising one phalange in emphasis, "aboard something the size of, say, a small moon, one could easily install and house such a mechanism."
- This quote will no doubt prove controversial, although, again, it's quite hard to say what by 'large asteroid' is meant in this context, especially when Balahteez goes to to say...
Let us say, for the sake of argument, that the battle station under construction is large enough to hold, oh, six or eight such weapons, as well as a hypermatter reactor that could power a small planet. And that it is possible to focus all of this energy into a single beam - by the largest and most powerful magnetic ring every made."
Here it is obvious that he speaks of the Death Star's tributary beams, and consequentially by 'large asteroid' must mean something dozens or hundreds of kilometers in diameter.


Politics:
As the commander of such a vessel, he would, perforce, be the most powerful man in the galaxy. The thought had certainly occurred to him that not even the Emperor could stand before him, did he choose to challenge Palpatine's rule. Then again, Tarkin knew the Emperor. If their positions were reversed, he knew that there was no possible way he would sanction anyone having such power - not without some kind of fail-safe.
- Self-explanatory.
Vader, unfortunately, was beyond Tarkin's command...
- A clarification of their relationship.
Her "crime" had been simply to back the wrong political candidate on a planetwide election on her world. The Emperor had decided that the man running for office was a traitor, as were his most influential supporters. He had thus ordered a score of well-to-do Mirialans to be rounded up, given a speedy "trial," and convicted of treason. Given the public outrage over this travesty of justice, it had been deemed politically expedient to execute them then and there, and so Teela and her compatriots had been shipped off to die on a world many light-years away.
- Apparently the Emperor isn't as secluded in this time period as we might have thought if he himself ordered this trial.
Vader felt a small ember of satisfaction glow within him. He had known for some time that the malcontents were growing both in organization and power. They had staged guerrilla raids on space stations and supply depots, had managed to obtain military matériel and warcraft from sympathetic industrial and shipyard designers, and had allied themselves with many alien species, playing upon the latters' resentment at being reduced to inferior status in the eyes of the New Order. They were more than just a motley collection of wild-eyed idealists; they now numbered among their ranks former Imperial strategists, programmers, and technicians, and their network of spies was growing more intricate daily. They were scum, true enough, but enough scum could clog any system, even one as complex and pristine as the Empire.
- Even as early as A New Hope the Rebellion was more advanced than many Trekkies like to portray them. This is doubly enlightening coming from Lord Vader himself.


The Death Star:
It had been nearly three decades since Raith Sienar had first made Tarkin privy to the concept of the "battle station planetoid," and it had taken almost a decade to get the idea through the snarls of red tape and bring the Geonosians on board to improve and implement the designs. The project had been known by various code names - such as the Great Weapon - and the original plans had been much improved by the Geonosian leader Poggle the Lesser. But it had taken years for the concept to be stewarded through the torturous maze of government bureaucracy before construction was finally ordered to begin. There were still flaws in the original plan, but many of them had been addressed during the building of the proof-of-concept prototype in the Maw Installation, and others were being corrected as they were uncovered. The greatest minds in the galaxy had been recruited or drafted to lend their expertise to the building of the ultimate weapon. The brilliant Dr. Ohran Keldor, the mad weapons master Umak Leth, the young but nevertheless laser-sharp Omwati prodigy Qwi Xux, the Twi'lek administrator Tol Sivron - they, and many others of the like stripe, had been investigated and approved by Tarkin himself.
- The history of the Death Star
It wasn't even a complete skeleton yet. When done, however, the battle station would be 160 kilometers in diameter.
- New canonical size for the Death Star.
... the station would mount a complement of craft, both station and ground, equal to a large planetside base: four capital ships, a hundred TIE/In starfighters, plus assault shuttles, blastboats, drop ships, support craft, and land vehicles, all ultimately totaling in the tens of thousands. It would have an operational crew numbering more than a quarter million, including nearly sixty thousand gunners alone. The vessel could easily transport more than half a million fully outfitted troops, and the support craft - pilots, crew, and other workers - would be half that number. The logistics of it all were staggering.
- The Death Star's complement.
On a project this size there was no way to complete the entire hull, pressurize it all, and then start building the interior - the amount of air necessary wold be tremendous. Once the vessel was functional, then the multitude of converters installed in every sector could easily handle the task, but until those were online, air would have to be sucked from a planetary atmosphere and hauled up out of the gravity well by cargo ship - either that, or build a huge conversion plant in space and truck water to that, which would be even harder. A tanker full of water was more unwieldy than one full of air bottles, and without proper heat it just turned into blocks of ice when you unloaded it, which in turn resulted in problems with increased volume. The sheer magnitude of the project wouldn't allow a full exterior hull construction first.

Thus it had been reasoned early on that, while the hull was being laid, individual sectors would be built and sealed...

The hull-plate extruders were only a few hundred kilometers away, hung at a fixed orbital point where the gravitational forces of the prison planet and the raw-material asteroids being towed to the gigantic masticators all balanced. The process was simple enough. An asteroid sufficiently high in nickel-iron content was hauled from the outlying belt to the masticators and fed into a maw; the whirling durasteel teeth chewed the asteroids into tiny bits and mixed them with alloy ores mined and brought up from Despayre, including quadanium. The resulting gravel had water added and was put under high pressure to form a slurry, then fed into pipelines that led to the smelters. These were essentially huge melting pots that refined the mix, burning off impurities. The resulting scarified ore was conveyed to extruders that pressed out the hull plate, rather like food paste from a squeezed tube. There was still a lot of slag left over, but this was just gathered together, pointed at the local star, and given a hard push. Months later, these slag-rafts would fall into the sun and be burnt up.
- the Death Star's construction.
It was hard to visualize the scope of the whole orb. Big didn't do it justice. The habitable crust alone was two kilometers thick, and included in it the surface city sprawls, armory, hangar bays, command center, technical areas, and living quarters. Below that would be the hyperdrive, reactor core, and secondary power sources.
- the station's layout.

Miscellaneous:
The Rebels were turning out to be more troublesome than many had expected. The Emperor had known it would be thus, of course; the resistance had not been a surprise to him. The Emperor was completely in concert with the dark side of the Force. He was the most powerful Sith who had ever existed.

As would Vader be, someday.
- Confirmation from Lord Vader himself as to the Emperor's status.


"ADO," Vil said as he approached. "What's flyin'?"

"You and your squad, among nine others," the AOD said. He kept waving at the still-approaching pilots, down now only to a handful. "VIP escort for the Imperial-class Destroyer Devastator."

Vil blinked. "We got a rainbow-jacket admiral? A Moff?"

"Not exactly. The guy running this ship is more of a monotone," said the ADO. Noting Vil's blank look, he added, "All black."

Vil got it then. "Darth Vader?"

"Friend of yours?"
- Interestingly, it appears that Vader isn't as well-known among the rank-and-file as I had originally imagined.
With a spy-killer installed, Brun didn't need to worry much about Ratua ratting him out if he were caught. The embed unit, about the size of a baby's fingernail, would sit harmlessly in Ratua's skull for the rest of his life. But it would be tuned to a certain word, and if that word were spoken by Ratua, and only Ratua, the device would explode. Not much of an explosion - just enough to fry his brain up nice and crispy.
- A nice little device here; if a prisoner can get his hands on one, there's no reason for the Empire not to employ them.

More later.
Last edited by ArcturusMengsk on 2007-10-19 08:18pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Post by Havok »

ArcturusMengsk wrote:
... the station would mount a complement of craft, both station and ground, equal to a large planetside base: four capital ships, a hundred TIE/In starfighters, plus assault shuttles, blastboats, drop ships, support craft, and land vehicles, all ultimately totaling in the tens of thousands. It would have an operational crew numbering more than a quarter million, including nearly sixty thousand gunners alone. The vessel could easily transport more than half a million fully outfitted troops, and the support craft - pilots, crew, and other workers - would be half that number. The logistics of it all were staggering.
- The Death Star's complement.
Those seem too low. Can these be taken as the bare minimums?
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Post by ArcturusMengsk »

havokeff wrote:
ArcturusMengsk wrote:
... the station would mount a complement of craft, both station and ground, equal to a large planetside base: four capital ships, a hundred TIE/In starfighters, plus assault shuttles, blastboats, drop ships, support craft, and land vehicles, all ultimately totaling in the tens of thousands. It would have an operational crew numbering more than a quarter million, including nearly sixty thousand gunners alone. The vessel could easily transport more than half a million fully outfitted troops, and the support craft - pilots, crew, and other workers - would be half that number. The logistics of it all were staggering.
- The Death Star's complement.
Those seem too low. Can these be taken as the bare minimums?
From my interpretation of the passage in question, probably not. Tarkin would know fully well how many vessels were assigned to the Death Star. The station could, undoubtedly, hold many more, given its vast size - but why assign so many vessels to an 'impervious' battle station?
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Post by VT-16 »

We see a drydock holding some kind of Star Dreadnought and several Star Destroyers in Visionaries. That might account for some internal space.
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Post by Jim Raynor »

havokeff wrote:
ArcturusMengsk wrote:
... the station would mount a complement of craft, both station and ground, equal to a large planetside base: four capital ships, a hundred TIE/In starfighters, plus assault shuttles, blastboats, drop ships, support craft, and land vehicles, all ultimately totaling in the tens of thousands. It would have an operational crew numbering more than a quarter million, including nearly sixty thousand gunners alone. The vessel could easily transport more than half a million fully outfitted troops, and the support craft - pilots, crew, and other workers - would be half that number. The logistics of it all were staggering.
- The Death Star's complement.
Those seem too low. Can these be taken as the bare minimums?
Those numbers seem like they're taken right from the minimalistic EGTVV. And I hope that's a misquote, and that it's actually "a hundred wings of TIE/ln starfighters" (the old number, which is still too small). 100 TIEs on the entire Death Star is absurd even by WEG standards.
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Post by ArcturusMengsk »

Jim Raynor wrote:
havokeff wrote:
ArcturusMengsk wrote: - The Death Star's complement.
Those seem too low. Can these be taken as the bare minimums?
And I hope that's a misquote
It is not. I am looking at the page, 14, as we speak. Second paragraph down. The full paragraph is as follows.
Aside from the fearsome, world-destroying "superlaser" itself - which was based upon the Hammertong Project and used a power source secretly taken by the 501st Stormtrooper Legion on Mygeeto during the Clone Wars - the station would mount a complement of craft, both space and ground, equal to a large planetside base: four capital ships, a hundred TIE/IN starfighters, plus assault shuttles, blastboats, drop ships, support craft, and land vehicles, all ultimately totaling in the tens of thousands. It would have an operational crew numbering more than a quarter million, including nearly sixty thousand gunners alone. The vessel could easily transport more than half a million fully outfitted troops, and the support staff - pilots, crew, and other workers - would be half that number. The logistics of it all were staggering. Oh, it would be a fearsome monster indeed. But a monster tamed and under Tarkin's control; a monster sheathed in quadanium steel plating, invulnerable and impervious.
It is not a misquote. I invite anyone with a copy to turn to page fourteen and see for yourself.
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Post by Ryan Thunder »

Well--At the very least, it would explain why they didn't just drown the rebels in fighters in ANH...
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Post by Noble Ire »

I find it especially odd that the stated number of TIE fighters in that quote, 100, is some seventy times smaller than the figure given in the original Essential Guide to Vehicles and Vessel, despite the fact that it is the same source that gives the Death Star's diameter as being a mere 120km. I should also note that the book states that the station's minimal operational crew was nearly one million, 265,000 soldiers included. The OT:ICS also notes that the Death Star had a crew of "millions".
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