Of course. Now I have to find my dead-tree edition of it.Fire, Fusion, and Steel 2e, for T4 has galleys (p.80).
I assume that the "galley" being referred to is the area on a ship devoted to the preparation of food, and not the "galley", being an oared fighting ship. The USCG buoy tender Bramble had a galley with the dimensions of 15.5 feet by 15 feet, and was capable of feeding 80 men 3 meals a day. Those were not frozen dinners, but prepared from scratch. That should give you some idea of how large a galley might be. I have toured the galleys of a couple of the very large cruise ships, and they do occupy a fair amount of space, They are feeding about 5600 to 6000 persons on board, counting both crew and passengers, and carry sufficient food supplies for 14 days at sea, if on a 7 day cruise.Fire, Fusion, and Steel 2e, for T4 has galleys (p.80).
Indeed.That should give you some idea of how large a galley might be.
To be fair, in CT (LBB2 and LBB5), a small craft stateroom is ... 2 tons and costs MCr0.1 ... so you can make of that what you will.The New Era 1248 has a 2 dton Galley for MCr 0.1 on their ship designs, for ships from 100 dtons to 1k dtons.
A 2 dton Small Craft Stateroom is for relaxation, resting, and sleeping for one person or hot bunking two people, while a 2 dton Galley is for preparing food for at least 1 to 20 crew/passengers (these numbers might not be accurate or realistic, but they're from TNE and based on the ship designs). (and yes, I now wonder if that's where they got the size & price from either directly or inspirationally)To be fair, in CT (LBB2 and LBB5), a small craft stateroom is ... 2 tons and costs MCr0.1 ... so you can make of that what you will.![]()
Just crunching numbers, the Bramble galley would be roughly 5 dT for 80 men or 1 dTon of “galley” per 16 men.I assume that the "galley" being referred to is the area on a ship devoted to the preparation of food, and not the "galley", being an oared fighting ship. The USCG buoy tender Bramble had a galley with the dimensions of 15.5 feet by 15 feet, and was capable of feeding 80 men 3 meals a day. Those were not frozen dinners, but prepared from scratch. That should give you some idea of how large a galley might be. I have toured the galleys of a couple of the very large cruise ships, and they do occupy a fair amount of space, They are feeding about 5600 to 6000 persons on board, counting both crew and passengers, and carry sufficient food supplies for 14 days at sea, if on a 7 day cruise.
That is correct for the Bramble, but careful scaling that down.Just crunching numbers, the Bramble galley would be roughly 5 dT for 80 men or 1 dTon of “galley” per 16 men.
assume that the "galley" being referred to is the area on a ship devoted to the preparation of food, and not the "galley", being an oared fighting ship.