Blue Star Enterprises Chapter 54
Added 2024-07-22 12:00:19 +0000 UTCThe next week went by rather quickly for Alexander. The station was starting to take shape with his new robotic drones being run through their initial tests.
He did have to make some design iterations and launch those replacement parts into orbit, but overall they were working out well. Then engineers would continue to monitor their work for the remaining time they were in system, but they said they didn’t expect any major issues.
Alexander hoped that was true. While the drones had some ability to repair each other, they wouldn’t be able to do much if the central processors died on them or if the track wheels broke off and they floated away. The clamping system should prevent that second scenario from happening, but it was still a possibility.
With the station well in hand and the final railgun turrets going up outside the facility, Alexander was able to finally free up production time for his engine. Technically, he was manufacturing three different engines, all scaled down to one-tenth the size. That was still quite a large engine to build. The engine cones alone measured two feet around.
It was a testament to the ridiculous amount of power these engines produced that a mere three of them could push something the size of the Zephyr along at nearly 3.6g with the ship's average cruising speed being 1g.
One g of acceleration didn’t seem like much, but when it was constant, it added up. The design specifications of the Zephyr listed an upper limit of .4c. There were two reasons for this. The first reason was that the engine could no longer accelerate the ship due to the technological constraints of the pulsed fusion drive.
.4c was a hard limit that humanity had yet to find a solution for. Well, technically they did with the advent of compressed plasma ejection, but he still knew there were people looking into the issue thanks to his talks with Dr. Lund. The second reason was a ship like the Zephyr was not designed for the increased stresses involved past that point. Since that limit was discovered hundreds of years ago, nobody saw the reason to design ships with pulsed fusion drives to handle any stress past .41c
Still, .4c was nothing to scoff at. It meant those three engines could push the Zephyr across a system the size of Sol in a little over three days. And that was at a standard cruising speed of 1g. If they had to push it to the ship’s maximum acceleration of 3.6g, they could do the crossing in 1.2 days. However, surviving that sort of acceleration for that long would have some serious drawbacks.
As far as he knew, humanity hadn’t discovered inertial dampeners or anything to reduce the effects of gravity on a person. Then again, Alexander had assumed artificial gravity plating wasn’t real until he saw it. So maybe some of the fancier ships had it or it was a military secret and he just wasn’t aware of it.
He realized he was getting off track again. The engines were powerful, so powerful that he couldn’t test a full-sized version on the planet without a specialized test facility. The scaled-down engines he printed consisted of an Omni, a Sinorus, and his new design. All of the designs he chose were from Class 4 engines to ensure the numbers were comparable.
Alexander had already planned these tests weeks in advance. There was a pit, much like the railgun pits, outside the facility specifically designed for this. In a perfect world, these engines would be tested in a vacuum, but Alexander didn't have the time or patience to build a vacuum chamber long enough to keep the exhaust gasses from melting the lining. He thought about coating a chamber in that heat-absorbing gel, but it was only rated for 3500 degrees centigrade. That was nowhere near enough to keep the plasma from melting everything around it. Even the pulsed fusion drive burned at nearly twice that temperature.
He suspected his pit would probably be rather worse off after these tests but that was fine. He had plans to incorporate liquid cooling into the walls as well as electromagnetic containment to keep the plasma from getting too close to the surface on future tests. It was the method that ship thrust cones used to keep from melting from the obscene temperatures involved so it should probably work pretty well. It was like creating a second thrust cone around the engine. But that was a later project.
Right now the pit consisted of a simple steel liner with fire-protective matting. The test rig had a mounting platform that allowed the engine to face straight up and a sensor that measured thrust. This design ensured the engine wouldn’t go flying off if there was some catastrophic failure with the mounting.
It was also the most simple and straightforward design he could come up with. Alexander didn’t want to waste a whole lot of time and resources on these first tests especially since he didn’t need exact numbers. With the engines being scaled down, he wouldn’t be getting those anyway. The only thing he cared about for this initial test was a side-by-side comparison of the three engines.
Before he could do that, he was running the parts that he could through the testing station he had built. It was a scaled-down version of the one he used on Petrov Station. While he couldn’t afford to take a testing station with him when he left, due to cargo space concerns, he did purchase the plans to build one. He just hadn’t needed it until now.
As the parts were running through the diagnostic tests, he moved over to the printer and pulled off another set of finished power banks. Ideally, Alexander would build a fusion power plant to supply the needed power to operate these engines. But he still didn’t have the capabilities needed to do that. So he resorted to printing out dozens of power banks.
The tests wouldn’t run very long, so he didn’t need to sustain the fusion reaction that turned the fuel into thrust. It would probably still take the power supply’s complete charge to run each test though. So long as it worked, he was fine with that. The power banks were rather quick and cheap to manufacture.
That left the last issue he needed to overcome, fuel.
Matthews had stated he would provide fuel if Alexander needed it, but he wanted to do this on his own. Finding water was easy. The facility had twenty-four wells that went down to a buried aquifer.
Converting this water into rocket fuel was a bit more challenging. He already had the designs for a processing plant though.
Turns out it took a lot of energy to convert good old H2O into D2O and T2O.
That meant more power banks. And a secure storage tank for the rocket fuel after it was ready. As a bonus, the fuel would come in handy when he finally built a fusion power plant for the facility. It wouldn’t be as good as what ships used for their reactors, but it would get the job done.
Building the insulated and lead-lined tanks was taking longer than printing and testing his scaled-down rockets. It wasn’t something Alexander was willing to rush though. He didn’t want to worry about the radioactive liquid causing issues around the facility or making people sick.
He looked over at the robotic arm that was welding two of the tank sections together. It was nearly complete and he would have to take the crane and remove it from the work area. The storage tank diameter was so large that it barely fit through the smallest opening to the surface. He would have to roll it out himself since there were no delivery vehicles low enough to hold it without hitting the top of the vehicle exit door.
It did highlight another problem. Mainly, how was he going to build full-scale engines without them getting stuck in his workshop?
He knew the far wall of his workshop faced away from the facility. The easiest option would be to cut out that wall and put in a large door with an overhead crane. It went on his to-do list.
It seemed like every time he marked something off that list, two or three more things got added.
Alexander rolled the dual-layer ring section out of his workshop and down the hall to the transport path. It made quite the racket as he went, but there were few people in his section, most having decided to move to the quieter areas after he restarted production. He couldn’t blame them. If he slept, a noisy assembly line that ran all day every day a few hundred feet away would be extremely annoying.
The walls and doors were sound dampened, but with so much production going on, the large entry was left open most of the time as the transport carts retrieved items and zipped down to where the parts were needed.
Once outside, Alexander filtered out most of the glare from the star. He was glad he figured that nifty feature out after arriving here, otherwise it was often too bright to work outside during the peak hours of the day.
It took him ten minutes to roll the ring next to the secondary pit near the engine test site. A simple overhead crane with a hand-operated chain ran on rails that passed over both pits. He didn’t want to expend a lot of resources for what was likely to be a temporary site.
After hooking the crane to the lifting points on the ring, Alexander pushed the unit into place over the pit. This was the last ring section going on the storage tank. The next part to come off of the assembly line would be the top. He lowered it almost in place before he headed down the spiral stairs that ran along the outside of the pit. Each level had a landing and he looked down at the previous one where one of his automated robots was welding the outside layer together. He was already glad he had designed the robots for multiple applications.
Before putting in the guide pins, he examined the inner weld. There were no issues as far as he could see, but he did note that the robot was almost empty of inert gas for the welder. That was one major downside of welding in an atmosphere.
He pulled out his tablet and sent an order to his storage. Soon one of his carts would be along with a fresh supply of gas. He was starting to run low on the supply Jasper brought him on the last trip. He would likely have to build a machine to harvest the gas from the atmosphere sooner rather than later. Another item got added to his list.
Alexander didn’t have any plans for a machine like that, but he could probably figure it out. It wasn’t like they could be too complex, people were filtering atmospheric gasses back in his time.
As he was adding the alignment pins, he saw the orange flashing light overhead that indicated his delivery had arrived. He finished putting the last pin in before heading back up. On the back of the cart were two seventy-five-pound cylinders full of argon. Since he didn’t want to have to come back out here until the top was completed, he grabbed both tanks and lifted them as he walked back down the stairs. He didn’t even need to stop the robot, he simply set one canister down, removed the empty one from the cart attached to the back of the robot, put a full one in its place, and then did the same for the nearly empty one.
There was no pause in the welding and no sign that it had lost shielding. Alexander went back up with the empty bottles and put them back in the cart. It drove away and he finished lowering the new section into place.
***
It was finally time to test his model engines. Three days had passed since he finished the fuel storage and checked it for leaks. The processing plant had been pumping out fuel since the tank was completed, so he had more than enough to do his tests.
The first engine, the Omni design, was even in place and ready to go. Unlike the time Alexander stood outside the railgun pit to watch the tests, he was well secure in a bunker a few hundred yards away for these.
Today he was observing everyone else work and taking Jasper's words to heart by delegating tasks. The group of people who had signed up and trained for this were going through the last-minute checks. Alexander could have done this all himself, but if he ever wanted to compete with companies like Omni or Sinorus, he needed skilled and capable people behind him.
Of course, Lucas, and Gabriella had shown up for this important milestone. Damien was busy with the Hawks, ensuring the last-minute training was completed with his new security teams. It would be up to that rather dour man to continue the training once the mercenaries were gone.
Alexander knew why Lucas was here, the man was curious about anything technological, even to the point of staring at him sometimes. However, he never did ask about the robot body. But why was Gabriella here? He didn’t have a good read on the woman as he only met her a handful of times. But she didn’t come off as all that interested in technology or him in general.
It's possible she was just here to report back to Damien. He didn’t mind, it wasn’t like these tests could be hidden.
“Green across the board,” someone said.
Lucas looked to him for the next steps, but Alexander simply smiled back. He had given the man an itinerary. If Lucas wanted to be the head of testing – which it sure seemed like he did – the man would need to figure some things out himself.
Seeing that Alexander wasn’t going to give him a hint, the younger man sighed and dug around in his pockets until he produced a crumpled sheet. Alexander wanted to frown at the abuse Lucas put that poor sheet of paper through. Did the man not realize how hard it is to find suitable material in an alien world to make paper?
…Now that he thought about it, probably not. It wasn’t like anyone used paper in this day and age. Alexander just liked the nostalgia factor of it. Plus it was way easier to make paper than it was to make a new tablet.
After smoothing out the paper and glancing at what was written, the man tucked it away again. “Shunt fuel to the engine storage tank.”
One of the operators pressed a few spots on a tablet and a red bar appeared on the holo display against the wall. Once the bar was full, the man disconnected and purged the line. It retracted behind an armored plate. Alexander had designed it this way to prevent any sort of explosion from back-feeding into the storage tank and bursting it apart.
Any explosion would be bad, but the small amount of fuel in the engine would only spread the radioactive liquid in a small area. If the storage tank bursts, the entire area could become slightly more radioactive. At least the fuel wasn’t explosive or flammable. That would be a nightmare.
“Test fire in five!” Lucas called.
After the countdown, Lucas pressed the ignition button. He could see people look around as a tingling sensation crawled along their skin. Even he could feel it.
“It’s just the energy discharging into the fusion igniter,” he stated calmly. True to his word, a few moments later, a ghostly blue flame shot from the open pit where the engine was resting. Less than a second after that, the sound of the engine firing rolled over their bunker, causing a bit of dust to rain down.
He made a note to have the control center moved a lot farther away when he got around to testing full-size models.
The blue flame lasted fifteen seconds before it burned through the tiny amount of fuel it had been provided.
Alexander recorded the results, and the next two tests were prepped and run over the next eight hours.
The results were not what he expected, and he returned to his shop a bit annoyed. The Omni engine outproduced the Sinorus engine, there was no surprise there. But he thought his design changes would have had him way above either of the engine manufacturers. Turns out he wasn’t nearly as proficient as he thought he was.
His engine performed so poorly that it failed halfway through the test. And the time it did run for, it produced only a third of the thurst of the Sinorus engine.
Alexander had skipped over his first three designs and tested the fourth iteration, and the first that the simulation software said would work. It did work if you could call that poor showing ‘work’. After arriving back in his shop, he marked that design as non-functional and began printing the other five. If none of them worked, he would need to step back and reassess what he was doing wrong.
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Got a bit of a chunky chapter today. There was a lot I wanted to cover in this one. You finally get to see some more information on what these future engines are capable of.
Some of you might be annoyed that Alex didn't come out swinging with a design that would blow his competitors out of the water. I hate when books do that. It feels cheap and lazy. If the MC has to work for it, it feels much more earned in the long run. It's like the saying 'You learn more from your failures than you do your successes.'
Comment below and let me know what you think.
Comments
With rail guns and fusion engines they could set up some gun turret too. Put a retractable fusion torch on an astroid and a rail gun plus a sensor suite and program it is fire tungsten rods on ships that don't run an identification transmitter.
melchi
2024-07-22 21:07:07 +0000 UTCOne thing I'd like to point out is the concept of planned obsolescence and artificial consumerism. Back in the days of the begining on the days of fordism, ford had made himself a problem, given he had way more cars than people buying them, but that wasn't an option, so they had to do something. They began to improve the cars, but that had a ceiling where the R&D cost made it untenable, so they began to engineer their cars in a way that they would break down in a planned amount of time, instead of being made for it to last. What happened after that? Ford became obscenely wealthy and consumers got fucked. The OSRAM cartel? Same shit but with lightbulbs and a "legalized" rulebook where every bulb had to last an determined amount of time or else your corpo would get fined (BY COMPANIES) if the offending product got into market. That takes me into OMNI and Solaris, these behemoths obviously can make way better engines than what there is on the market, but it isn't economically sensible and that's the true angle of attack that Alex has for breaking into market, the Pepsi angle.
Gabriel Melnik
2024-07-22 21:06:30 +0000 UTCThanks for the chapter. I personally expected him to run into more problems. He still could, he hasn't tested to set up a maintenance schedule or figure out the operational life. Making it faster might cause it to break down faster as well.
melchi
2024-07-22 21:02:09 +0000 UTCI'm curious to believe that part of the problem is because it's on the planet or just too small. I would be happy if it isn't perfect the first time as well, as I'm interested in how he could change an organic looking engine a whole class smaller than what it is into an easily maintenanced beauty
Merlin's Fan
2024-07-22 20:45:51 +0000 UTCHe tested all 3 side by side to get a baseline. His 4th design didn't meet that baseline. Perhaps he will have better luck with the later iterations that are closer to the original engines he cribbed his design from. The Pulsed Fusion Engines are the ones capable of entering an atmosphere. The Zephyr couldn't land with them because the ship was too big.
mmarkgraf212
2024-07-22 20:33:45 +0000 UTCThank you for the chapter It will has been better if you say the engine performances was better than the 2 other in the fist 10 seconds of the test but then problems aroused after prolonged exposure to the atmosphere since the engine are better designed for out off world travel and they don't perform the same inside an atmosphere. That way you could make the mc concentrate to make a dual purpose engine for interestelar travel and atmospheric travel.
Null
2024-07-22 17:14:09 +0000 UTCI don't mind that it wasn't super successful, but if none of them turn out even marginally functional or even slightly better than I don't really see the point. If all his initial designs and theories fail than it's a super let down. If he doesn't have some kind of inate able to improve things there's no way he can actually compete with one of the big players.
ShadeByTheSea
2024-07-22 14:22:12 +0000 UTCI'm on board with having him not build a wünderengine right out the gate, he may have masterful computations and some know-how, but his systems are all about getting better with iterations rather than being perfect from the start. As he gets the practical experience with figuring things out though he can start eclipsing the established tech levels cause he is, after all, not limited by the contemporary human limitations.
Aclys
2024-07-22 13:30:25 +0000 UTCTFTC. Glad it didn't come out super success, still sucks it was that bad though. I hope Alex starts taking better control of the station soon if he has people "reporting" his activities to someone else.
Hammy
2024-07-22 13:01:14 +0000 UTC