David Braben talk
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- LittleBear
- ---- E L I T E ----
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- Joined: Tue Apr 04, 2006 7:02 pm
- Location: On a survey mission for GalCop. Ship: Cobra Corvette: Hidden Dragon Rated: Deadly.
Ah but the bar's customers are earning $250,000 to 9 Million USD per 'job'. So $2500 to $8,000 for food and drink is still pocket change!
OXPS : The Assassins Guild, Asteroid Storm, The Bank of the Black Monks, Random Hits, The Galactic Almanac, Renegade Pirates can be downloaded from the Elite Wiki here.
back to tons and kg,
yes, a kg is a kg, and thats in weight as we would understand it, BUT a ton is to do with the space taken up.
there is no heavy and light in space, weight is a function of gravity and mass. so a volume measurement is used- after all the canisters are all of the same size
that volume is roughly 14 cubic metres
so a ton of food is the ammount that fits into that space, as is a ton of computers, alien items, and slaves
yes, a kg is a kg, and thats in weight as we would understand it, BUT a ton is to do with the space taken up.
there is no heavy and light in space, weight is a function of gravity and mass. so a volume measurement is used- after all the canisters are all of the same size
that volume is roughly 14 cubic metres
so a ton of food is the ammount that fits into that space, as is a ton of computers, alien items, and slaves
Hmm, I always figured that the ton was the actual mass, and that the containers had a lot of padding in them if they had very dense materials inside...
But who knows for sure, really!
But who knows for sure, really!
Hey, free OXPs: farsun v1.05 & tty v0.5! :0)
- Cmdr James
- Commodore
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- Location: Berlin
Thats only kind of true: momentum and kinetic energy are related to mass, so knowing the mass you are hauling does matter for handling, and possibly fuel use, and indeed even physical constraints of the ship structure, if you are too "heavy" and slam on the brakes you might rip yourself apart.
That said, you are right that a t is a unit of volume. It is the standard size of a canister, which presumably can hold approx 1 ton of something (probably water knowing how standards tend to be set).
That said, you are right that a t is a unit of volume. It is the standard size of a canister, which presumably can hold approx 1 ton of something (probably water knowing how standards tend to be set).