Hood wrote: * | May 18th, 2017, 8:44 am |
Can't help feeling you've got a tad too much draught and excessive freeboard given the placement of the portholes. Normally I'd aim for 16-17 pixels per deck in terms of height.
Yeah, 16-17 is normally my standard as well. I just used the mark 1 eyeball for those as a general guideline. Those will be changed to correct spacing prior to the next upload.
The draught, these class cruisers (like all my "scout" cruisers"), in my theory anyhow, have extra fuel bunkerage and stores stowage for extended operations, so the space is used for that, also giving better crew accommodations. I believe a deeper draught also gives better stability? They are not really designed for use with the fleet, but optimized for independent operations. All my Scout Cruisers were like that. Protected and 3rd Class cruisers were the ones who filled the traditional screening function for the fleet. Scouts were small classes, rarely more than 3-4 ships, and the classes were only built "as needed" to fulfill their mission, advanced intelligence gathering and monitoring enemy operations. This class was planned, authorized, and designed in the late teens as replacements for scouts built in the late 1890's, and as follow-ons to the Lilith Class of 1920-22. By the time they were laid down aircraft carriers and submarines had begun fulfilling that mission. The Cordelias were reclassified as Light Cruisers upon completion, and as they did have the extended range and accommodations they were primarily tasked as flagships for remote and colonial squadrons. Only 2 were built, with the third hull being converted to an aircraft carrier.