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Audacious Passage

Bryce Science Fiction posted on Dec 18, 2010
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Description


Continuing my Commonwealth Era ships series. It took me two days to model the spacecraft and another four hours to do the scene. I wasn't really happy with the way the moon Enceladus turned out. But with the low sun angle, I suppose it would have to be kind of dark. So I rendered a mask and tried to adjust the moon in post, brightening it and bluing it on the daylight side. The yellowish side is reflected Saturn glow. (Cool, eh?) The little moon to the right of the ship is Mimas and off to the left, using a fuzzy material setting, is Titan. Background moons and planet are at scale for a 40 degree view. The Enceladus outgassing is probably way too bright to be realistic, but I like the effect. Thanks for all your views, comments and favorites. If I don't get another image off this year, Happy Holidays and New Year! --- The Audacious class patrol frigate was the true successor to the Sword class and it incorporated many of the lessons learned in the operation of that earlier vessel. Three decades of technological progress also helped, allowing for more powerful and efficient power plants and engines. It could achieve a total 1000kps delta-V, allowing a round trip to Saturn in the course of a six month deployment. Better accommodations and more reliable systems allowed for a full year deployment, putting Uranus in range as well, but that system's population didn't top a hundred people until the mid twenty second century. However patrols periodically made the Pluto/Charon run from the inner system; with fueling facilities established on the moon Nix, a round trip was still possible within a year. The patrol frigate's normal crew was twenty-four, with a dozen living quarters in each of the swing habitats. Like the Swords these habitats were retracted while under thrust. But unlike the Swords, the Audacious class could support twice its standard complement for a full year and had a large cargo bay to store contraband, life boats and even small shuttles. Armament was only marginally advanced from the Swords. In general, any sort of weaponry would discourage or force the surrender of pirates and other criminals. A hit from one of the fourteen missiles or either of the lasers or auto cannon would easily disable the radiators of a non-compliant vessel, preventing it from using its power plant for all but the most minuscule thrust. After that, it was merely a matter of matching velocities and boarding the troublesome vessel. The main problem with the Space Force's patrol protocols was simple the vastness of space. While populated regions were well patrolled by Byzantium class fast frigates, once a ship left the neighborhood of a planet or heavily settled asteroid, it was often the only ship within a hundred million kilometers. With only twelve Audacious class patrol frigates authorized and only ten of those completed, most of the solar system was still an uninhabited unforgiving frontier. -- Darrow's Guide to Combat Spaceships: The First Interplanetary Age, Free Avon Press, 2505

Comments (8)


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ragouc

2:42AM | Sun, 19 December 2010

Very well done.

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Seaview123

7:55AM | Sun, 19 December 2010

Your ship modeling is excellent and well thought out as always. I agree with you about the 'bump' on the near moon, but it's still a very good looking sci-fi pic.

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NefariousDrO

8:27AM | Sun, 19 December 2010

That ship is a real beauty! I like the level of realism and detail always incorporate into your ships, such wonderful designs!

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peedy

8:42AM | Sun, 19 December 2010

Fantastic scene and modeling. Corrie

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DPW

11:31AM | Sun, 19 December 2010

Love your ships as always. Only comment is on Enceladus: the bump/normal map on it looks just a little strong for my tastes. Gives it a somewhat unreal "toy" look, compared to the Cassini pictures at least: http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/image/0603/enceladus_cassini_PIA07800f.jpg There also seem to be some blueish tints in that photo. Maybe slap a mask on and paint a few highlights? Still, minor point about a cool piece.

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kjer_99

1:06PM | Sun, 19 December 2010

I really like this model! Well thought out machine. As always, the technical information is fascinating as is your future history of mankind's spread across the Solar System. I also appreciate the scientific accuracy of your designs and illustrations. Merry Christmas and may your coming year be wonderful!

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shayhurs Online Now!

1:10PM | Sun, 19 December 2010

Nicely done!

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Chipka

2:01AM | Mon, 02 May 2011

I'm bopping around, playing catchup and I have to say that I'm glad to have "bopped" here. I love this image and the ship is superbly done, well thought-out, and, if I may say so, kinda cute! I'm a sucker for a well-thought-out sf spacecraft that actually looks (and in a fictional sense, at least) functions as a real spacecraft might. Ah, but I'm just a sucker for a good spacecraft: realistic and wholly speculative alike. In terms of this image, I love the realism, the details, and the incredible sense of scale despite the somewhat narrow focus, but then Saturn provides instant vastness and possesses the added bonus of being one of my favorite in-solar-system bodies that receives too little attention in science fiction for my tastes. (Ha! I'm one to talk, I have yet to write/create anything with Saturn in it! I'll have to rectify that soon.) Marvelous work here and I'm glad that I'm ever-so-slowly beginning to catch up.


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