Timerover51
SOC-14 5K
Cargo has always been in displacement tonnage, timerover. You start talking mass tonnage with Traveller ships and you're just going to confuse folks. Especially since the mass doesn't matter (between grav lift and acceleration compensation). I'm pretty positive the 1000 Credits per ton cargo fee is per displacement ton, too.
Calling Far-Trader! Oh, Dan! Far-Trader, come in!
Mass does not matter, interesting.
With respect to the difference between displacement tons and mass tons, I am not confusing the two. Real world cargo shipping uses Register tons, a measure of volume of 100 cubic feet, Measurement tons, a measure of volume of 40 cubic feet, Stowage factor, a volume measure of how many cubic feet does a mass ton of a specified cargo occupy, and Deadweight tons, a measure of mass. Another measure is TEU, or Twenty foot Equivalent Units, based on the standard cargo container of 20 feet in length and approximately 8 feet in height and width.
If you have a high volume to weight ratio cargo, say wood, you look at the ship's register ton capacity, if you are moving say, ammunition, you look at the ship's measurement ton capacity, and if you are shipping steel sheet at less than 5 cubic feet to the ton, all you worry about is deadweight ton capacity. For cargo containers, you are charged a flat rate per container, regardless of weight. Typically, there is a do not exceed weight limit on the container, as a twenty foot container fully loaded with sheet steel is going to weight about 275 tons. The last time I checked, there was a limit of 10 tons on containers going from the US West Coast to the Solomon Islands via Brisbane, Australia.
Now, let say that as a PC I hear that Planet B, a low population agricultural planet one parsec away from Planet A, where I presently am, has an urgent need for corrugated steel sheeting for construction of storage buildings. I decide to speculate and buy 1000 tons of corrugated steel sheeting for 200 Credits per ton. A starship displacement ton of 13.5 cubic meters will hold 103+ metric tons of steel sheet, so call it 100 tons. If shipping cost is figured at 1000 Credits per displacement ton, my shipping cost of 10 Credits per ton of steel sheet is immaterial. My 1000 tons of steel sheeting takes up only 10 tons of the Free Trader's 82 available displacement tons of cargo space. That would mean that the deck under the steel is holding 4551 pounds per square foot of deck. For comparison, the design loading for a parking garage is 125 pounds per square foot. Think about how solidly built is your average parking garage. Of course, I guess you could spread it out a bit, but he might have more cargo, and you said that mass does not matter.
Since you say that mass does not matter, how about I load that 200 ton Free Trader with 8200 tons of steel sheeting. If I sell the steel for 260 credits a ton, I make 410,000 Credits, for a 23.8% return on a two week investment. Of course, in the MegaTraveller Referee's Manual, page 62, it is stated that the hull of a 200 Ton Free Trader weighs 70 tons, so I am loading 117+ tons per ton of hull weight, but as you say, mass does not matter. For comparison, the WW2 Liberty ship loaded about 3.3 tons per ton of hull weight. I use the Liberty as an analogue as a lot of them became in effect, Free Traders, following the sell off after WW2.
Two final things.
One, are you still saying that MASS DOES NOT MATTER?
Second, I was under the assumption that the title of the forum in "In My Own Traveller Universe".