Brigade XO wrote:Other than being able to mount a Streak Drive on a Dispatch Boat (with whatever weight and other costs that entails) you current production Military Dispatch Boat give you the speed to move mostly data to where you need it. There is a little actual cargo or personal capacity but it is really small.
We really haven't see the small volume/high value commercial fast transports that would be running critical shipments and some people from point to point. I expect they exist but so far have not been relevent to the plot lines. "Small" commerical freighters are in the millions of tons range. The difference between current air-freight and moving stuff by containership is generaly you can get something overseas in a number of days by getting into the loading/shipment cycle of any of several commercial shipping organizations vs chartering something like a coupe of 747's or similar aircraft. At inter-stellar distances, just how badly do you need X amount of equipment or materials that are too big to stick into a private corporate (or news company) DB?
You start to get really specilized and in "interesting" market segments like stuff that is such a super expensive but small volume luxury or is actaully contraband and you are sneaking around really fast.
Especially interesting because on the timeline of interstellar transport the size of the ship has very little impact on the delivery time; its almost all whether you're willing to spring for mil-grade propulsion and shielding.
Let's contrast a 28,000 ton dispatch boat against a midsized 4 mton freighter - both presumed to have full mil-grade drives and shielding (and doing this all with pre-Grayson compensators - but the better the compensator the less the mass difference matters) and I'll assume Earth is a typical planet at about 12.8 LM inside the hyper limit.
The DB can accelerate at roughly 539g.
The 4mton freighter at roughly 450g.
The total trip time for a 20 ly one-way journey for the DB is 2.89 days (77.36% of which is spent cruising at top speed).
For the 4mton ship that same journey is 2.95 days (74.37% of which is cruising at top speed)
That's right about dead-on a 90 minute difference in transit time over a bit less than 3 days. And that transit difference won't vary with the trip length; since both ships cruise at exactly the same speed - they only differ on the acceleration portions of the journey.
Incidentally if you went up to something the size of a sphinx class (403.9g) the transit difference only goes up to about 2.5 hours. Though there's a question of whether any cargo is important enough to push even a medium sized freighter as hard as DBs tend to be - but that's harder to put numbers to.
I guess my overly detailed point is that there's no particular reason why small volume/high value have to be linked; you can be quite nearly as fast at high volume.
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I made some simplifying assumptions in my spreadsheet for this.
Ignored orbital velocity, time to reverse ship heading and the residual velocity upon entering n-space, assuming no grav waves, etc.
Despite that it should be pretty accurate, it does track time to reach the hyper limit, velocity drop from going from n-space to the Theta bands, time to accelerate from the residual speed to 0.6c, cruising time, then time to accel and decel to the planet on the far end.