I think there are no RCS booms required at all. To spin the vessel around x and y only outward thrusters are needed. To rotate around its longitudinal z-axis I would use RCS engines at the main-engine booms. Most of the inertial moment is packed in the engine section anyhow. If this is rotated, the truss and crew compartment will follow.
My logic behind the rear RCS boom is that it allows finer control, as well as better translation capability and no unintentional translation while rotating.
Though you're right, most of the inertial moment is in the propulsion section anyway. Which leads to unfortunate consequences on where I put the center of spin... :shifty:
I'll see if I can fix that... and if fixing it doesn't lead to the exhaust streams frying my auxilliary craft.
27% of the mass for auxilary craft seems an awfull lot, considering this is supposed to be a passenger liner and not an exploratory vessel. I would expect to find a running starport with its own short-range vessels at the destination.
Good point... I originally envisioned this as a vessel capable of transporting two DGs, and thus acted as the accomodation and whatnot for their passengers.
I guess you could just leave the auxilliary craft off, increasing your Dv capability and your cruise speed even more. :thumbup:
Or, the auxilliary craft could be replaced with a sort of MPLM cargo module. Which now turns the passenger spacecraft into a light, high speed freighter.
Though it could still concievably be used as a sort of ferry, for DGs or some other hopefully more realistic craft (what that would be I have no clue).
I've thought about a more realistic version of the DG... almost like Moach's G-42, but nucular powered and smaller. The XRs already have engines in the ISP and thrust capability as nuclear lightbulb engines, but they have other problems, like fuel density and aerodynamics. And it really doesn't make sense landing a spaceplane on some airless moon, let alone giving a spaceplane some parasitic weight like hover engines. It would only really make sense to use a winged vessel if you were going somewhere with an atmosphere, like Titan... or maybe Mars.
Some of the mass figures there I'm not too happy about either. The truss masses a lot, especially if we're considering some sort of hokey use of carbon nanotubes. And the propellant tanks are probably represented as too light. And there isn't any provision for my mini nuclear reactor, which is pretty much redundant anyway considering it would be more than easy for my engines to generate a few kilowatts during cruise or while in orbit... that's several thousandths of the power they produce while thrusting.