Project Red lego goes here. Blue one There?

Salun

Das Bluejay El DESTROY YOU ALL
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Alright this isn't so much a add on but rather a sort of personal fancy project that I am working.

I've spent basically half the night on the drafting board trying to start an isometric blueprint of the interior of the Arrow Freighter 18. As of now Beasclly Im just trying to get the outlines right before starting to fill in the interiors.

DOn't hold your breath. Chances are Ill never finish this but it would basiclly be a realistic represntaion of how the girl might be on the inside. Engine rooms. Fuel tanks. Crew and cargo compartments. Airlocks and have you. Where they all fit.


Now I just need a few things to help along if I ever make an attept to finish these fun little blueprints

1. Would it just be cool to make them? Seeing the inside of the ship uploaded as say a PDF or JPEG file?

2. List of dimensions. Mainly depth of the docking bay and bride into the hull. Circumfrence of the center cargo span. etc.

3.And this is just a fun thing I suppose to discuss. Propulsion. What type of power source. Energy generators and what not. Try and keep it realistic I don't want pics of ZPM's posted all over the forums \o/

4.Materials. Whats the hull made of. Metals and such

Lemme know what you think and I ever finish the prints Ill scan and upload them to OH.
 
Dont have enough time to answer all of em, just the last one: materials!
Reinforced steel structure with carbon nanofiber cores, skin should be

  • Reinforced carbon-carbon (RCC), used in the nose cap and wing leading edges. Used where reentry temperature exceeds 1260 °C (2300 °F).
  • High-temperature reusable surface insulation (HRSI) tiles, used on the orbiter underside. Made of coated LI-900 Silica ceramics. Used where reentry temperature is below 1260 °C.
  • Fibrous refractory composite insulation (FRCI) tiles, used to provide improved strength, durability, resistance to coating cracking and weight reduction. Some HRSI tiles were replaced by this type.
  • Flexible Insulation Blankets (FIB), a quilted, flexible blanket-like surface insulation. Used where reentry temperature is below 649 °C (1200 °F).
  • Low-temperature Reusable Surface Insulation (LRSI) tiles, formerly used on the upper fuselage, but now mostly replaced by FIB. Used in temperature ranges roughly similar to FIB.
  • Toughened unipiece fibrous insulation (TUFI) tiles, a stronger, tougher tile which came into use in 1996. Used in high and low temperature areas.
  • Felt reusable surface insulation (FRSI). White Nomex felt blankets on the upper payload bay doors, portions of the midfuselage and aft fuselage sides, portions of the upper wing surface and a portion of the OMS/RCS pods. Used where temperatures stay below 371 °C (700 °F).
 
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