According to the Wiki, a missile warhead is equivalent to 12.5 kilotonnes. Really? 12,500 tonnes of TNT?
The atom bomb dropped on Hiroshima was the equivalent of about 12,500 tonnes of TNT. Is that really what's stuck in the top of those 30 Credit missiles - an explosive warhead equivalent to the Little Boy atomic bomb?
Should it be "12.5 tonnes" rather than kilotonnes?
12.5 tonnes of TNT would fill a removals van. It's going to make a big pop when it goes off. The safe distance, when inside a building is about 360 metres. In the open, it is 2 kilometres!
Blast Force of a Missile
Moderators: winston, another_commander
- SandJ
- ---- E L I T E ----
- Posts: 1048
- Joined: Fri Nov 26, 2010 9:08 pm
- Location: Help! I'm stranded down here on Earth!
Blast Force of a Missile
Flying a Cobra Mk I Cobbie 3 with nothing but Explorers Club.OXP and a beam laser 4 proper lasers for company
Dropbox referral link 2GB of free space online + 500 Mb for the referral: good for securing work-in-progress.
Dropbox referral link 2GB of free space online + 500 Mb for the referral: good for securing work-in-progress.
- Commander McLane
- ---- E L I T E ----
- Posts: 9520
- Joined: Thu Dec 14, 2006 9:08 am
- Location: a Hacker Outpost in a moderately remote area
- Contact:
Re: Blast Force of a Missile
The question is (1) where the information in the Wiki comes from, and (2) what the term 'kilotonnes' in the context of Oolite even means.
(1) If the information comes from the manual, it's pretty much canon, but I don't know the source. It could be that some Wiki contributor just made the number up.
(2) We already know that a 'ton' of commodities in Oolite obviously doesn't mean the same as a 'ton' in 21st century RealLife™. And we have absolutely no way of establishing what the reference system to the 'kilotonnes' is. Except of course: making it up.
(1) If the information comes from the manual, it's pretty much canon, but I don't know the source. It could be that some Wiki contributor just made the number up.
(2) We already know that a 'ton' of commodities in Oolite obviously doesn't mean the same as a 'ton' in 21st century RealLife™. And we have absolutely no way of establishing what the reference system to the 'kilotonnes' is. Except of course: making it up.
- JensAyton
- Grand Admiral Emeritus
- Posts: 6657
- Joined: Sat Apr 02, 2005 2:43 pm
- Location: Sweden
- Contact:
Re: Blast Force of a Missile
It was added in this edit, so you’d have to ask Arexack_Heretic.Commander McLane wrote:I don't know the source. It could be that some Wiki contributor just made the number up.
As for the question at hand… I gave up on trying to make sense of units and scales in Oolite a long time ago, but I would expect missiles fired between handwavium-shielded spaceships to use (small) nuclear warheads. Conventional explosives aren’t much use in space unless they’re in direct contact with the target. (For real-world, unshielded spacecraft, you could probably do a lot of damage with a fragmentation warhead driven by a conventional explosive. Pineapple missile, anyone?)
E-mail: [email protected]
- Commander McLane
- ---- E L I T E ----
- Posts: 9520
- Joined: Thu Dec 14, 2006 9:08 am
- Location: a Hacker Outpost in a moderately remote area
- Contact:
Re: Blast Force of a Missile
That would be the Fragmentation Missile from Missiles & Bombs.oxp.Ahruman wrote:(For real-world, unshielded spacecraft, you could probably do a lot of damage with a fragmentation warhead driven by a conventional explosive. Pineapple missile, anyone?)
And indeed, I share the sentiment about units and scales.
@SandJ: It's absolutely futile to try to connect anything within Oolite to anything within the current real world. You can't get it to work, no matter how hard you try.
Re: Blast Force of a Missile
Ships that can shrug off collisions with barely more than shield damage may even withstand small nukes in close proximity.