My take is that the jump grid creates a bubble of real space inside itself. Then (as an entirely separate process) the jump drive creates a "hole" into jumpspace. Jumpspace is fairly dense, though, so anything suddenly thrust into it would react much as if it had been slammed into a liquid at high speed (i.e. much like if it had hit a solid surface at high speed). So a large quantity of hydrogen is first injected into jumpspace, creating a bubble of "soft" jumpspace that will rapidly dissipate again[*]. Before that can happen, the jump drive slams the ship across the interface and into jumpspace.
Once inside, the jump drive's function is over and done with. you're going to emerge from jumpspace in roughly seven days, give or take, and there's nothing you can do to affect where and when. Meanwhile, the jump grid is maintained by the power plant (using as much fuel as if the maneuver drive had been going
).
[*] This bubble is often called a jump bubble, just as the bubble of realspace created by the grid is, causing much confusion and misunderstanding.
Hans
Once inside, the jump drive's function is over and done with. you're going to emerge from jumpspace in roughly seven days, give or take, and there's nothing you can do to affect where and when. Meanwhile, the jump grid is maintained by the power plant (using as much fuel as if the maneuver drive had been going

[*] This bubble is often called a jump bubble, just as the bubble of realspace created by the grid is, causing much confusion and misunderstanding.
Hans
Last edited: