So I've been perusing the user uploads of late and came across more than a few oddly labeled ships. It seems everyone has the idea that large scale vessels say, 80,000 blocks(and some well even into the millions) are considered Small Frigates. First off let me preface by saying I'm barely able to sit up and read while laughing so hard, I have mountain dew running out of my nose after seeing more than one or two ships labeled as such. It really is ludicrous to call something 7x the size of your local Star a Small vessel.
So I went digging and found a few ways to classify a ship by it's size. Below is a nice easy chart for you all to gander at.
You may notice a few overlapping areas in the chart, that's cause the role of a ship is what determines it's name.... for instance the difference between cruisers and destroyers is namely the purpose of the ship. Cruisers are long range missile bombardiers, while Destroyers are direct surface attack vessels.
With that in view, this chart is based off real life data. Assuming that one block, which is one meter cubed of whatever, weighs at LEAST a tonne. This is because water of all things weighs one tonne(1000kg) exactly at 1m^3. So it's pretty darn generous to say that all those fancy metals and weapons weigh as much as water does. Let alone less than that.
The actual block values in tons come from the US naval classification grid, plus a few extras considering they don't list drones and bombers and such in their classification. For example, most frigates weigh in at less than 10,000 tons, 14 is pretty generous there me thinks...
Pick apart, discuss, enjoy.
So I went digging and found a few ways to classify a ship by it's size. Below is a nice easy chart for you all to gander at.
You may notice a few overlapping areas in the chart, that's cause the role of a ship is what determines it's name.... for instance the difference between cruisers and destroyers is namely the purpose of the ship. Cruisers are long range missile bombardiers, while Destroyers are direct surface attack vessels.
With that in view, this chart is based off real life data. Assuming that one block, which is one meter cubed of whatever, weighs at LEAST a tonne. This is because water of all things weighs one tonne(1000kg) exactly at 1m^3. So it's pretty darn generous to say that all those fancy metals and weapons weigh as much as water does. Let alone less than that.
The actual block values in tons come from the US naval classification grid, plus a few extras considering they don't list drones and bombers and such in their classification. For example, most frigates weigh in at less than 10,000 tons, 14 is pretty generous there me thinks...
Pick apart, discuss, enjoy.