QUOTE (Delphi @ Apr 6 2010, 03:22 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
NDC command centers are usually deep within the vessel as well, and shielded by heavy bulkheads. There are no windows on NDC vessels for the exact reason mentioned above: they are a structural liability. As warships become larger, you begin to see a sort of "onion-skin" effect happening. The outermost layer is always the heaviest armor and the refractors, with the occasional gap through which will protrude an exterior weapon system. Within that layer is a series of structural supports and null space, meant to strategically implode and ablate under heavy fire or impact. Beneath this layer are most of the power systems, and any hull-mounted weapons' mechanical assemblies. The next layer is comprised of heavy but brittle radiation shielding. One more layer within this holds the ship's water and plumbing network, and several secondary power assemblies, such as the ones powering the interior lighting. Finally, within these many layers, are the habitable spaces in which the crew live and operate the ship.
Some ships have exterior airlocks equipped with mechanical housings that allow them to retract within the ship and be replaced by armor segments. This means that in the event of an enemy attack, the porthole for the airlock door doesn't become a weak spot; the service gantry withdraws and the hull closes up, becoming almost completely solid in its place.
A few notes:
Why is the power system outside the rad-shielding? Even if its rad-hardened, it can be damaged by a big enough EMP/radiation weapon. You can transfer power to external weapons/defensive systems through contact induction across the rad shielding. I'm assuming that this power system refers to electronics and distribution, and that the generator is incorporated into the engines. If its a nuclear-based power generation system, then the current layout makes sense.
You don't need to make retractable airlocks. Just make the airlock door out of armor anyways. Its stronger and its one less system to break. You probably don't need a window on the airlock door. The armored airlock door will still have the same seam as the regular airlock, which is more of a liability than the door itself.
Regarding shuttle/spaceship processing power:
The low processing power on space equipment is mostly due to underclocking, rad-hardening, and limiting power consumption. Although modern processing chips have a lot more computing power, its generally overkill for what's needed in those situations.
QUOTE (StarSword @ Apr 5 2010, 11:30 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
Never mind your laptop; my old GameBoy Color had more computing power than the Apollos.
Somehow that little point -- take out the bridge, you take out the ship -- seems to be a perennial problem in sci-fi (and in meatspace navies, for that matter). In Halo the Covenant get around the problem by placing their command centers on the deep interior of the hull (refer to the novels).
A few years ago I took a tour of a WWII-era battleship which was converted to a museum ship. IIRC, the ship had 3 fallback command positions from which the engines and rudder could still be controlled assuming the bridge was destroyed. Mind you, the last one was in the engine room itself, but with a spotter on the deck and a chain of guys to yell commands down to the engine room you could still steer/navigate the ship. Although "take out the bridge and you've taken out the ship" is a common theme in Sci-Fi, most military ships don't work that way. Its an inconvenience to not have a bridge or command staff, but the ship can still fight.
This post has been edited by LNSU : 06 April 2010 - 04:27 PM