Talk:Venator-class Star Destroyer/Legends

Need some stats on engines etc. anyone got the ICS for ROTS? VT-16 08:52, 29 May 2005 (UTC)
 * The ROTS ICS states that the acceleration is 3,000G. JimRaynor55 17:01, 29 May 2005 (UTC)

In ROTS there was an interior shot of a Venator-class that showed a battery of large projectile guns that fired huge shells. Any indication what those were? --SparqMan 18:00, 21 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Is the "thousand VenStars at Cour." thing actually established as more than fanon? And shouldn't we mention the Leviathan and Ravager as prototypes up the top? --McEwok 19:18, 15 Aug 2005 (UTC)

How can completely different ships that existed thousands of years ago be prototypes for the Venator-class? JimRaynor55 23:22, 16 Aug 2005 (UTC)
 * Yeah, I don't think they developed prototypes for the Venator-class Star Destroyer back in the time when KOTOR took place. Sure, the concept would evolve into the idea of Star Destroyers thousands of years after the construction of the Leviathan. Cmdr. J. Nebulax 23:53, 16 Aug 2005 (UTC)

Battle of Rendili
This article claims that the Sundiver, Triumph, and Doneeta are Venator-class Star Destroyers. The CUSWE says that they're Acclamator-class transports. Which one is correct? JimRaynor55 09:17, 21 Aug 2005 (UTC)
 * The battle is depicted in the 'Dreadnaughts of Rendili' Republic arc. The warships are definately Acclamators - Kwenn

Venators and GCW
Ok it says venators were used in GCw but theres no sign of them so we can't say they were used intill proof they can have all been broken down or maybe sold or melted down for resources. Anyway it sounds like a venator fan wrote the last part.
 * It's already been decided. Admiral J. Nebulax 12:41, 24 Dec 2005 (UTC)
 * Sadly, they were cut out of Empire at War just a few weeks ago. You can still see screenshots of them from recent previews, but would this count as an appearance or not?


 * The developers said they took it out because of game mechanics. They couldn't find a way to balance it with rebel craft or something, which imho is stupid, as they could just have made it into a fully-fledged carrier-unit, matched it up with a rebel carrier and had them both be more vulnerable to enemy fire than the Victory-class and the Imperial-class (which is what the devs said to begin with, that it was "outdated tech" and would be easier to destroy).


 * Now, would screenshots in a magazine constitute an official source, if coupled with the fact that they didn't take it out because of contradiction with SW history, but because of balancing issues in the game (which had nothing to do with "RL" SW, as the Empire always had an advantage of size and strength and kept millions of different ship-designs in their forces.)


 * This should be good. :3 VT-16 14:21, 11 Jan 2006 (UTC)


 * I'd say that Empire at War wouldn't be an appearance, because they didn't appear in the game. Admiral J. Nebulax 14:33, 11 Jan 2006 (UTC)
 * I wasn't talking about having the game as an appearance, but the game magazines that printed the pictures, where Venators were seen. I'd did write that any GCW sources were "sketchy at best", maybe that should be enough? Since the reason for it getting cut wasn't that it didn't fit in with the GCW-era Empire, it was just a manner of game mechanics not working out. VT-16 15:13, 11 Jan 2006 (UTC)
 * Oh. Admiral J. Nebulax 18:01, 11 Jan 2006 (UTC)
 * Maybe they'll be in the EAW expansion pack, which we all know is going to happen anyways. But my question is: that image from DE really looks nothing at all like a Venator, and is there any reason why it's here? Kuralyov 18:29, 18 January 2006 (UTC)
 * The front half of that DE ship has a vague resemblance to a whole Venator, but the rear half makes it completely different. This isn't close enough of a resemblance to bear mention in the Venator article IMO, and it's quite a stretch to suggest that it's a modified Venator. I think it should be removed. JimRaynor55 19:11, 18 January 2006 (UTC)


 * The Venator is in Empire at War - you just have to unlock it. All the coding is there. I have physically fought with a Venator on the demo. --Naylor182 00:00, 24 January 2006 (UTC)
 * Interesting. But don't post comments in the middle of a discussion. Admiral J. Nebulax 00:27, 24 January 2006 (UTC)
 * The problem is, the demo could have been made before the Venator was axed. I don't know how demos rank on the canon-scale, but I wouldn't be surprised if it's not high. VT-16 09:04, 24 January 2006 (UTC)
 * I'd say keep it out of the article, except for the Behind the Scenes section. Admiral J. Nebulax 21:29, 24 January 2006 (UTC)
 * Isn't the policy that cut material is not canon?--Lord Zack 15:53, 26 January 2006 (UTC)
 * It depends. Admiral J. Nebulax 20:18, 26 January 2006 (UTC)
 * The problem was slightly confounded by the developers' own statements. First they announced to the community that the Venator was part of the game, then they put it up on the official site, then they took it down again. And they explained that the Venator was taken out, not because it didn't fit in with the GCW-era, but because of "balancing issues". I guess that means they couldn't find a Rebel ship to be its equivilant (even though they had it available for both factions in multiplayer, which would have solved the problem automatically). So the reason it got taken out was not due to any conflicts with continuity, but because of game-mechanics. I guess as statement like this could fit in the BtS section. VT-16 12:34, 27 January 2006 (UTC)
 * So, it wouldn't be an appearance at all. Admiral J. Nebulax 20:36, 27 January 2006 (UTC)

Why did they leave it out of the main game anyway? They could have easily solved the problem by giving the Venator to the Rebels, since they thought that the Empire was too overpowered. That was a completely stupid idea. Wouldn't the Rebellion eat up the Venator-Class Star Destroyers until the MC80's came into service? I meant the Rebellion would probably want them, for their starfighter capacity. With such a craft, space superiority with the Rebellion's X-Wings, Y-Wings, and A-Wings would almost be assured. Except from Defectors that had those types of ships in their disposal I suppose.
 * I could have sworn I saw the Venator in television commercials for "Empire at War", although if they aren't in the finished game, i suppose it doesn't count, but it seems strange that they would advertise something not in the game. Perhaps they are not controllable by the player, but merely appear in cutscenes. --143.229.1.17 19:30, 3 March 2006 (UTC)
 * The commercials were probably made before they took it out of the game. Admiral J. Nebulax (talk) 21:01, 3 March 2006 (UTC)
 * Well, apparently they felt that the Venators weren't needed. Admiral J. Nebulax (talk) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 00:51, 13 April 2006 (UTC)
 * Well, that's your point of view. Admiral J. Nebulax (talk) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 20:14, 13 April 2006 (UTC)
 * What do you mean? If you're saying that the Rebellion would have Venators before they got Mon Calamari cruisers, no, because the Empire would still be using them, although they would mainly have been replaced by Imperials. Admiral J. Nebulax (talk) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 16:30, 15 April 2006 (UTC)
 * Er, in theory, the Rebels would want any dedicated warships they could get.--Guy Ruffian 21:45, 15 April 2006 (UTC)
 * Exactly. Anyway, I doubt the Rebels would be buying warships from the Empire. Admiral J. Nebulax (talk) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 22:10, 15 April 2006 (UTC)
 * What about stealing? ;)
 * I don't think they would try that. They probably never got close to having a Venator. Admiral J. Nebulax (talk) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 22:19, 15 April 2006 (UTC)
 * The odds of an entire crew defecting in the limited time that Venators were in active Imperial service somehow strike me as very, very slim. --Guy Ruffian 12:20, 17 April 2006 (UTC)
 * Exactly. There's no way that an entire crew of a Star Destroyer would decide to defect. Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 12:22, 17 April 2006 (UTC)
 * I wouldn't say that there's no chance at all, especially in a space opera adventure setting like Star Wars, but it strikes me as unlikely enough that we can safely assume it didn't happen unless explicitly informed otherwise. from a trusted (i.e. official) source. --Guy Ruffian 17:04, 17 April 2006 (UTC)
 * Well, unless a bunch of Rebels boarded on and took it over, it's very unlikely. Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 17:18, 17 April 2006 (UTC)
 * Well, since the Venators were going to be available to both factions (in Multiplayer, at least), that would have proven some were stolen. ;) VT-16 19:55, 18 April 2006 (UTC)
 * Well, "were" is the key word there. Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 20:04, 18 April 2006 (UTC)
 * Hey, it happened with a whole lot of Nebulon-B frigates. It could happen with a Venator, too.  And about the canonicity, I think it's canon.  The reason is that Leland Chee has said on many occasions that content goes into the Holocron well before products are released and stays there, even if it's cut for constraint or mechanics reasons.  If the Venator model made it into the game files, it's almost certain that the Holocron mentions its appearance.  --Thetoastman 20:08, 22 June 2006 (UTC)
 * If that happens, I don't think we should count it as an appearance. Fleet Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 22:08, 22 June 2006 (UTC)

Fuel Consumption
The page says a Venator can burn 40,000 tons of fuel per second. Without knowing the weight of the fuel, if we assume it is super dense and a litre weighs a ton, a Venator would burn 40,000 Litres per second. Since a litre is 10 cubic CM, that's 4,000 cubic Metres per second. The Venator is 1,137 meters long, 548 meters wide, and 268 meters high including the bridge. If we assume the majority of the hull is 1/3 of that, it's 89m high. Therefore a Venator, at most, has 55,453,764 Million Cubic Metres of space. If we say the entire hull is dedicated to fuel, then the Venator has a grand total of 23.1 Minutes of fuel. Surely Venator's were deployed for more than 23 minutes at a time?

You might want to contest what I'm saying, but let's analyse this:

- 40,000 tons of Fuel that has an unknown weight, if we assume that a litre weighs a ton (IE it's 1000 times heavier than water), and some assumptions must be made, unless someone can show me what Fuel in Star Wars weighs, then 40,000 tons occupies 4,000 Cubic Metres.

- The largest dimensions of a Venator are known, so if a Venator were a rectangular prism we'd know its volume, however it isn't, so I assume, by trimming off some height, perhaps a little too much which is more than compensated for by the maximum of the other two dimensions being used, that the volume is 55,453,764 Cubic Metres.

- By statement one, a minute's fuel occupies 2,400,000 Cubic metres. Therefore 23.1 minutes fuel occupies 55,440,000 Cubic Metres, roughly the Venator's entire capacity. This is assuming the entire ship is devoted to fuel, which clearly it isn't.

So, basically, that figure is insanely over the top. Even if you decrease the consumption by half, by whatever justification, it's still only 46.2 minutes. Even if you then double the capacity, you only get 46.2 Hours (My working out on that one might be wrong; I doubled the Venator Volume, then divided it by half the consumption per second and then divided it by sixty for the number of minutes and sixty again for the number of hours, this is correct?) the Venator has supplies for 2 years, ie 2,515,968,000,000 tons of fuel, which, if we use my first statement's assumption, would occupy 251,596,800,000 Cubic Metres, 251,596,800 Cubic Kilometres. The USA is 9,631,418Km squared (So not in height), so a Venator would need to carry 26122.5 times the size the USA, Cubed, the Earth has 510,065,284.702 km square area. So a Venator would carry enough fuel to cover the earth (Assuming it were flat over sea level, of course) to a height of 125,798,400 km, if the fuel were 1000x the weight of water.

This seems just a tad unreal to me.
 * They invented hypermatter specifically to explain this. Starships can carry fuel equivalent to the mass of a moon without nasty gravitational side-effects. &mdash;Darth Culator   (talk)  14:40, 13 March 2006 (UTC)

I'm sorry but that's makes no sense - we've gone from fuel that's amazingly dense to fuel that is essentially anti-matter and for some reason moves faster than the speed of light. It still doesn't fix the volume problem... (Note, I think I dropped a zero in my calculations above somewhere, but all the same, the figures would similar)
 * A wizard did it. Seriously, I'm not the astrophysicist who came up with it, so it doesn't necessarily make a lot of sense to me either. But somebody at Lucas Licensing OK'ed it, so it's canon. &mdash;Darth Culator   (talk)  14:56, 13 March 2006 (UTC)

":|" I mean it's just, as a kid I loved Star Wars, but even at a very young age the gaping holes in continuity were obvious. Most of it could be fixed by George Lucas simply giving a flying over what is and isn't given the thumbs up; he's turned his universe into something of a whore, it sells itself for money. He's a sci-fi pimp.

And when I saw this, I decided to do the calculations and they make no sense. Then (I know that you're trying to help) I'm directed to a page that made me think, if I may quote Futurama's Hermes Conrad "BUT THAT JUST RAISES MORE QUESTIONS!", because it doesn't explain in any way how the matter could be super-dense, if anything it tries to confuse people with bullshit, all it really does is use technical terms that mean it's essentially anti-matter that's moving faster than the speed of light... and this stuff's supposed to be in a fuel tank of things across the Galaxy? I mean, stuff Exxon Valdez, this stuff has the potential to wipe out a planet if it's not magically stopped from doing that (which is also unexplained).

It's like "Okay, you got me, that's not possible... until I babble at you in jargon so you give up!" I mean I know a little of Quantum Physics and all that crazy stuff but not ever have I heard of Hypermatter outside Sci-Fi. I just don't get it. At least can someone explain why Hypermatter helps, how it is utilised if it's moving faster than light speed and why it isn't annihalating the Universe?
 * "Okay, you got me, that's not possible... until I babble at you in jargon so you give up!" -- Honestly, I think it's exactly like that. The power requirement for destroying a planet was so fantastic that something needed to be said about it, and that's what they came up with. There are relatively few examples of genuine technobabble/handwavium in Star Wars, so this one doesn't bother me that much. I know just enough about physics to sound especially stupid when an actual physics guy joins the party, but there are places you can go where they may be able to explain in more detail, like Stardestroyer.net or the Jedi Council Forums. &mdash;Darth Culator   (talk)  15:37, 13 March 2006 (UTC)

Thanks, I'll look into that, sorry to use the discussion area somewhat like an IM, but this bothered me. I know that Star Wars has a lot of bable that's meaningless, usually I don't mind too much, sometimes there's actual physics of some form under it, what gets me is that anyone can read just enough to see that quantum physics for example might hold the answers to FTL travel et cetra. I like Star Wars and Star Gate and some other Sci Fi, even though modern science shows that the odds of one planet like Earth are something riddiculous like 146 10x137 (That's 146 followed by 137 zeroes) which I'm told is higher than the odds that either of us will be killed by a sudden reversal of the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics (though I'm not sure how a reversal of Entrophy would kill someone), but the point is that having even just two planets capable of sustaining intelligent life is virtually impossible (although later Terra-forming by later intelligent life might be possible on some planets) and yet there's supposed to be millions in the Star Wars Universe. And that I can somehow ignore, but the concept of such massive consumption of fuel bothers me a lot, so I asked here and you pointed out that Hypermatter stuff that's just jargon which make the whole connundrum worse.

Anyway, thanks again, I'll look into that. EDIT: Having looked at the wiki-article for hypermatter, they say it burns the equivilant of 40 000 tons of matter per second, not actually 40 000 tons of matter per second. I think that's the difference, that hypermatter of lesser weight expounds as much energy per second as 40 000 tons of ordinary matter. VT-16 11:37, 30 March 2006 (UTC)
 * "...sorry to use the discussion area somewhat like an IM...". Hey, you're not the first. ;) Admiral J. Nebulax (talk) 20:22, 13 March 2006 (UTC)
 * Not having read up on the subject, the name "Hypermatter" seems to imply a connection with "Hyperspace". Is that used as some sort of explanation? Either matter scavanged/syphoned from the hyperspace dimension or stored in some sort of pocket-universe? (With the engines of a ship being like the Tardis of Doctor Who, greater on the inside than the outside.) VT-16 11:28, 30 March 2006 (UTC)
 * That sounds good. Admiral J. Nebulax (talk) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 22:05, 30 March 2006 (UTC)

I was on the verge of taking the stance that, once again, the folks on the inside (those that get to create that which we debate about... Curtis Saxton is one of the rare ones that got to cross over from the outside to the inside) overdosed on some wierd acid and just made some outrageous numbers up, but then I read over some of your previous stuff here (multiple people), and realized &mdash; just because it states that it can burn an obscene amount of fuel per second does not mean that it does so all the time! Think of it like an afterburner on a jet fighter, or the reactor on a submarine, where it is capable of dumping X (large number) pounds of fuel per second to achieve this speed, or of going to 105% on the reactor to achieve this speed, but for most normal operations, it's doing so at a scaled back consumption amount. Perhaps the Venator is operating at 30% consumption while in common orbit of a planet, or cruising on patrol, and then works up to 50-60% consumption when in battle, going to full "turbo-afterburner-gonzo-boost" 100% consumption when doing something immensely tasking, such as heavy bombardment, or hyperspace jump (I'm using it as an example, don't know for certain). -- Hawke / Rtufo 14:25, 17 May 2006 (UTC)
 * Perhaps... But what's with the different font color? Fleet Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 20:08, 17 May 2006 (UTC)
 * We've had this discussion over and over again. Hypermatter is not ordinary matter. It was invented to show how a big starship can expend massive amounts of fuel without needing a huge volume to contain it. VT-16 16:53, 26 June 2006 (UTC)
 * To those who disagree with canon figures: Canon is canon, whether you like it or not. Fleet Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 18:48, 26 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Further on that point, I reccomend people consider doing math instead of making wild assumptions. I've had discussions with Dr. Saxton and contributed to his power page due to my training in the field.  The fuel numbers as presented are entirely workable, the thing carries enough fuel for about 4 hours of peak reactor ops.  After 4 hours of getting hit by the main guns, there is going to be nothing left, so you don't need that much power.  Hypermatter does nto have to be special fuel, it just has to be regualr fuel stored at high densities, similar to those found in the cores of gas giants and brown dwarfs.  Lowkey 00:59, 17 August 2006 (UTC)
 * So you're like a junior Dr. Saxton? Fleet Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) (Data file) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 13:58, 17 August 2006 (UTC)
 * Just someone who does sufficient research and has the appropriate schooling to know what they are talking about. Lowkey 12:45, 19 August 2006 (UTC)
 * Ah, I see. Fleet Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) (Data file) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 12:52, 19 August 2006 (UTC)
 * So, basically, most capital ships never operate on peak conditions unless it's an extreme situation, to keep going for a much longer time? And afterwards they fill up in a station? That explains the existence of tankers and refueling procedures in SW (like what the X-wings in ANH do before the battle). Since we here on Earth have found ways to simulate extreme astronomical conditions in huge particle accelerators and the like, it stands to reason that much older and advanced societies like the ones in SW, come up with preservation of energy in equally extreme conditions. VT-16 21:35, 19 August 2006 (UTC)
 * True. Fleet Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) (Data file) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 01:11, 20 August 2006 (UTC)

Main reactor can burn 40k tons of fuel per second? riiiiight.....
I removed the line that said this, this was either a typo here or where the submitter found it, or a lie/trolling. 40k tons of fuel per second is like 1/8 of what the our sun burns, this massive amount would fuel several 2nd Death Stars at max hyperspace velocity. Someone please, find out what the true value for this is.
 * That's the number that's in print, and it's consistent with the other numbers in the same book. If you don't like it, go whine to DK Publishing or Lucas Licensing, don't go altering facts to fit your opinion. &mdash;Darth Culator   (talk)  15:55, 16 March 2006 (UTC)
 * Don't remove stuff like that again. It's canon. Admiral J. Nebulax (talk) 20:27, 16 March 2006 (UTC)
 * Canon only in the ICS, not supported by other sources.
 * ICS is canon, and other sources don't cover the subject. You have no grounds for questioning this number. JimRaynor55 20:03, 12 May 2006 (UTC)
 * Just because you don't like it doesn't mean it's not canon. Live with it. - Darth Culator 20:59, 12 May 2006 (UTC)
 * Well said, Darth Culator. Fleet Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 21:41, 12 May 2006 (UTC)
 * But I think his point was that that's not physically possible. Are we really supposed to believe it burns twice as much fuel as its entire cargo capacity every second?  The thing's not even big enough to hold the fuel it would take to run for a few seconds, let alone jump to lightspeed.  --Thetoastman 20:03, 22 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Unfortunately, canon says so. Fleet Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 20:05, 22 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Have you people even read the book? It says "40k tons of hypermatter fuel". Hypermatter is not the same as matter. VT-16 16:43, 26 June 2006 (UTC)

Semantic Concern Re: Fighter Capacity
I'm submitting a minor edit in the section regarding fighter complement. Currently, it says that the ship "could support 420 fighters in its bays altogether". I'm fairly certain that all published, official sources say that's what it did support as its regular complement, and doesn't mention if that's the maximum capacity. (In fact, I'd assume that the maximum capacity was higher, if only because it's senseless to force yourself to use all of a resource, i.e. fighter berthing space, as part of regular operation; it would leave no easy alternative if something went amiss. Then again, that's military spending and design for you...)

Until we have confirmation either way, I'm going to render the language a bit more ambiguous as to total capacity, leaving the definitive wording only for the standard complement.--216.83.103.138 15:39, 5 April 2006 (UTC)
 * I personally think that it was fine before your edit, but oh well. Admiral J. Nebulax (talk) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 15:56, 5 April 2006 (UTC)
 * Just wondering why you changed the qualifiers for the period in which it carried the specified complement; it really strikes me as worthwhile clarification. For instance, I pretty strongly doubt that whatever Venators the Empire used still carried any Jedi starfighters--and actually would assume that they outfitted them to carry TIEs at some point, but that's just speculation. It makes sense to me, though, that instead of buying more Clone-era starfighters, they's use their TIEs, a cheaper alternative that more of their pilots specifically trained to fly. Again, that's just pure fan-speculation.--216.83.103.138 16:23, 5 April 2006 (UTC)
 * Well, when you had "late Republic", it made it sound like it had existed before the end of the Republic. It just didn't sound right. Admiral J. Nebulax (talk) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 16:29, 5 April 2006 (UTC)
 * Ah, swell. If you don't mind, I'll re-edit with an attempt at greater clarity.--216.83.103.138 16:35, 5 April 2006 (UTC)
 * I have no problem with that. Admiral J. Nebulax (talk) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 16:38, 5 April 2006 (UTC)

Fighter capacity
why would you want 190 jedi starfighters in the hold? Clones didn't fly them and even if the ship was carrying jedi there would only need to be two or three. Thanks, I didn't know that
 * Um, where did you get the idea that only Jedi flew them?Commodore Axilon 23:51, 22 September 2006 (UTC)
 * Oh boy... Just because they're nicknamed Jedi starfighters doesn't mean only Jedi get to fly them. Fleet Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 02:17, 23 September 2006 (UTC)
 * Sorry if I sounded a little mean there... I've been having a rough week&mdash;actually, more like two or three weeks. Fleet Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 19:51, 23 September 2006 (UTC)
 * Note that in Battlefront II, they're nicknamed "Republic starfighters", and I believe they're some kind of elite Imperial fighter in Galaxies - Kwenn 19:52, 23 September 2006 (UTC)
 * Many nicknames for the same craft. Fleet Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 19:56, 23 September 2006 (UTC)

Yeah, because it makes just soooo much sense to call it a 'Jedi Starfighter' when most aren't flown by Jedi. Good grief. As much as I recognise this as being canon, I would guess that there was a mistake which should have been '192 V-wings OR 192 Jedi Starfighters' rather than '192 V-wings and 192 Jedi Starfighters'. Actually having done some calculations I found that it is physically impossible for the Venator to carry its full load of fighters, especially when you consider that the Venator has the same main weapons as the Imperator, is smaller, and yet carries 350 MORE fighters. Saxton has a lot to answer for. The Venator, as showed in the ROTS:ICS, is a dedicated carrier vessel, more-so than the Imperator (from SW:ICS): Venator - Imperator Despite its size, the Imperator has less volume to store fighters than the Venator. it is not dedicated to hangar facilities. :) The micro-fighters would also not take up as much space as GCW-era fighters. An Eta-2 is much smaller than a TIE fighter, for instance. They are also shown being flown by Imperial pilots in SW: Republic 78. VT-16 21:11, 6 October 2006 (UTC)
 * The Venator is a carrier, unlike the Imperial. Therefore, nothing's wrong. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 11:11, 6 October 2006 (UTC)
 * Exactly. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 21:13, 6 October 2006 (UTC)
 * Plus, anon, your calculations don't replace canon. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 21:15, 6 October 2006 (UTC)

Venator picture
Quick question - shouldn't the main pic of the Venator (the one above the stats) be of one in Republic colours? It just strikes me as odd that the main pic we have for the main Republic warship is of it in Imperial colours. By all means the Imp-coloured pic should be kept, perhaps swap two of the pics?
 * Haven't seen the same complete profile picture of it in the Republic version. I'm sure someone can take a good, comprehensive snapshot from ROTS. VT-16 09:31, 8 October 2006 (UTC)
 * What's the difference? Both the Republic and the Empire used them. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 14:52, 8 October 2006 (UTC)
 * The difference is that being a Republic ship, hence the name 'Republic Attack Cruiser', the main picture of it should be in Republic colours. Darth Windu
 * This is basically a Star Destroyer class and paint jobs seem to be more specific to one cruiser while the Imperial version has no colors at all as if it comes fresh from the shipyards. -- Redemption Talk [[Image:Oldrepublic.jpg|15px]] 16:27, 8 October 2006 (UTC)
 * "Republic Attack Cruiser" is a nickname. And it's obviously not called that during the Imperial era. Besides, the Imperial version gives a much better view of the ship, which is what is required in infobox images. Leave it at that. - Kwenn 16:34, 8 October 2006 (UTC)
 * The Republic pictures that were tried out, didn't show the entire ship, like I feel a good profile picture should do. The Imperial one is like that and the only difference is a paint-job, nothing more. If you can find an equivilant picture for the Republic version, that's good, too. :) VT-16 16:52, 8 October 2006 (UTC)
 * But until then, do not change the images around. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 18:23, 8 October 2006 (UTC)
 * I've found another pic of the Venator, uploading now. As I said, the main reason for this is that the main picture of the Venator should be in its rightful Republic colours, whilst of course the Imperial version should be seen as well. Ah there we go, now that is a nice pic :) Darth Windu
 * The picture you uploaded has been deleted. We don't use fan-created images, only images from official sources. -- Ozzel 04:15, 9 October 2006 (UTC)
 * Ah okay, didn't know that. I was wondering why it had been deleted when it was clearly superior. Out of curiousity, why aren't fan-made images allowed? Darth Windu
 * The fact that is was "superior" can be argued (my arguement still stands that the Imperial version looks like it's fresh from the factory and not customized)...And fan-made aren't allowed because they aren't official. If it were allowed, then God knows that the Plagueis page would be filled with it. Also, it's good way to avoid any right violations. Though there are rare cases where they are allowed, but for things like cropping and brightening the image up. Fan-art is not very professional looking on a site where it's trying to be as true and professional as it possibly can be. -- Redemption Talk [[Image:Oldrepublic.jpg|15px]] 05:07, 9 October 2006 (UTC)
 * Fan made images are also allowed on user pages. MyNz 05:09, 9 October 2006 (UTC)
 * Ah, well thanks for the clarification. I personally thought the image looked incredibly good, but I'll just have to try harder to find an official pic. Oh, do officially-licensed models count as 'official'? Darth Windu
 * Yes, but we don't use them for main images or any images in an article. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 14:20, 9 October 2006 (UTC)

The picture of the first Venator in ROTS seems like the most iconic picture of the ship, so maybe we should just use that as the main pic? - lalala_la
 * It's not a good shot, though. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 04:24, 17 October 2006 (PDT)
 * I like the one they have up now, the one who put it up can't remember the source and neither can I, but I'm pretty sure it's official. The CG models of other ROTS vehicles were pictured the same way, with a bird's-eye-view and a slant to the left or right. VT-16 11:52, 17 October 2006 (UTC)
 * Yeah, I'm pretty sure there's a source for it. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 19:52, 17 October 2006 (UTC)
 * That would be me. :) I can't remember the source because I came across it a long time back and saved it to my hard-drive, and of course didn't save the source. Pretty sure its official because of the detail, plus the quality, layout, and background are identical to the other official pics. Darth Windu
 * I remember seeing it somewhere, but I'm not sure. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 20:03, 19 October 2006 (UTC)
 * Due to the color of the background and the model details this is definitely one of the CG standard model shots taken by ILM. It could have appeared on Art of Revenge on the official site. VT-16 17:19, 21 October 2006 (UTC)
 * I don't think it was there, but I believe it was on the official site. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 19:10, 21 October 2006 (UTC)

Venator weapons
Alright, I've recently noted an issue with the Venator weapons loadout. The official stats say that she has the 8 turbolaser turrets and two twin medium turbolasers. The turrets are obviously on either side of the ship superstrucutre, and as we can see in the main pic, the two mtwin medium turbolasers are near the front of the vessel. However on the page http://starwars.wikia.com/wiki/Turbolasers, http://www.starwars.com/episode-iii/explore/sithsnap/2005/08/sithsnap20050804.html, and the picture http://starwars.wikia.com/wiki/Image:Turbolaser_explosion.jpg, we can clearly see a turbolaser exploding on a Venator that is just as clearly none of the aforementioned turbolasers. Anyone know what the explanation is? Darth Windu
 * I'm not sure if the internal turbolasers from the film are accounted for on the picture, or if they appear on the overall stat sheet. They might have been part of the point-defense laser cannons, since their line of fire is so limited. If anything, "laser cannon" in this case could just be shorthand for "turbolaser cannon". VT-16 07:11, 23 October 2006 (UTC)
 * Probably. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 20:17, 23 October 2006 (UTC)

Forces of Corruption?
Does it really appear in the actual game, no code-fixing necessary this time? VT-16 21:54, 27 October 2006 (UTC)
 * I think so. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 22:24, 27 October 2006 (UTC)
 * I see someone mentioning it in the Skirmish mode and on the demo, one belonged to a Mandalorian leader. Can someone with the game elaborate on this? It's for the article. :) VT-16 10:51, 28 October 2006 (UTC)
 * I'll see if my friend got it yet. Maybe he could help. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 13:51, 28 October 2006 (UTC)
 * Yes, it's in FoC. Purchasable in Skirmish. Jorrel Fraajic 18:36, 7 November 2006 (UTC)
 * Yep. It's the ship of the Mandalorian leader, and there are a bunch of them floating in debris fields. -- Darth Culator  (Talk)(TINC) 19:31, 7 November 2006 (UTC)
 * So the Mandalorians have their hands on a Venator. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 21:01, 7 November 2006 (UTC)
 * I heard somewhere that they were only purchasable by the Consortium, but that may have been in story mode. So, in Skirmish mode, they can be purchased by all three sides? That would warrant a small addition to the infobox. 8D VT-16 22:01, 7 November 2006 (UTC)
 * Logically, though, these ships wouldn't be ones that are being actively built. I figure if you're going to translate game mechanics into reality (which is generally a terrible idea, but let's indulge) that the time and cost involved with deploying a "new" Venator or Victory or Acclamator is actually related to refurbishing and crewing a mothballed ship. And for the Rebels, stealing and then refurbishing and crewing a ship. So if we were to change the infobox, we'd have to say "*Rebel Alliance (after 0 BBY); *Zann Consortium (after 0 BBY)" or something similar. -- Darth Culator  (Talk)(TINC) 22:35, 7 November 2006 (UTC)
 * Of course, the only part of games I mention in articles, are which craft are available to which people at a given time, not what firepower it has in the game or that the size in-game is correct or properly proportioned. The only reason I've been asking about the "future" of the Venator-class, is that despite its major flaw (the hangar-opening providing a good target), the class is just as powerful as the Victory and if that can get reused and recycled, wouldn't this class at least be given work with second- or third-rate Imperial units? So it's nice to see they finally added it and thereby give a certain amount of closure to it. (And I really, really wanted to see it in the GCW era) :P VT-16 23:03, 7 November 2006 (UTC)
 * Me, too. The Venator-class is a great carrier; it definitely hasn't had enough time in the post-RotS Galaxy. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 01:24, 8 November 2006 (UTC)
 * If the Mandalorians had Venators, we have a category to add. --Mr. Perfection 20:02, 18 November 2006 (UTC)


 * No the Mandalorians only had ONE Venator and it was Serving as the Mandalorian Leader (Mandalore?s) Ship I(I don't remembe if it was Mandalore him self or a Clan Leader)
 * One Venator or a thousand, it doesn't make a difference. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 20:55, 2 January 2007 (UTC)

Year Introduced
Can we say what year it was introduced?
 * Only if we know what year it was introduced. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 23:46, 18 November 2006 (UTC)
 * Well when does MedStar II take place?--Herbsewell 00:30, 19 November 2006 (UTC)
 * 20 BBY. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 03:07, 19 November 2006 (UTC)
 * Well there you go.--Herbsewell 03:09, 19 November 2006 (UTC)
 * I'll add it in, then. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 03:17, 19 November 2006 (UTC)

On Hypermatter - Paging the math and physics guys...
An interesting tidbit from the WotC site may lend some insight into the Hypermatter issue: Jedi Counseling 94

One fuel cell for a "colossal" ship holds 100 tons of actual matter. A fuel cell has enough fuel for "one hour of combat, sublight travel (ramming speed), or atmospheric flight." A Venator-class SD burns 'up to' the equivalent of 40,000 tons of fuel per second.

3,600 seconds in an hour. 40,000 tons per second. 144,000,000 equivalent tons of hypermatter per hour=100 tons of actual matter per hour. 1 actual ton of hypermatter = 1,440,000 equivalent tons of actual matter. Probably less depending on the circumstances of full reactor burn, but definitely somewhere in that ballpark.

Now, math and physics guys, tell me how I'm wrong. Or not. -- Darth Culator  (Talk)(TINC) 20:45, 19 November 2006 (UTC) Let me try to clarify this. The fuel cell holds 100 actual tons. This is enough fuel for an hour of combat. The Venator's reactor expends hypermatter to produce energy equivalent to annhiliating 40,000 tons of matter per second. This would be the equivalent of 144,000,000 tons of matter in an hour. So the fuel cell holding hypermatter, which only masses 100 tons, is equal to annihilating 144,000,000 tons of matter in a pure conversion to energy. So one actual physical ton of hypermatter has the energy equivalent of annihilating 1,440,000 tons of plain regular matter.
 * Uh... I was sort of good at physics, but I'm just confused now. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 20:51, 19 November 2006 (UTC)
 * Wouldn't it be 1 actual ton of actual matter=1,440,000 equivalent tons of hypermatter?--Herbsewell 19:35, 22 November 2006 (UTC)
 * Yeah, I think that would make more sense. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 19:37, 22 November 2006 (UTC)
 * Wouldn't it be 100 tons of Hypermatter fuel (in the fuel cell) produces the same amount of energy as 144,000,000 tons ordinary fuel (which cannot fit in the fuel cell)? VT-16 00:07, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
 * That's what I meant. Some people have a way with words. Other people just... not have way. -- Darth Culator  (Talk)(TINC) 00:41, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
 * Yeah, I think that's right. I was a little confused, but I think I'm getting it now. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 01:33, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
 * Is actual matter regular matter?--Herbsewell 16:50, 28 November 2006 (UTC)

Does that make more sense? I'm having trouble converting it from random thoughts in my brain into ideas that other humans can understand. The numbers are probably smaller depending on what percent of maximum reactor burn the ship maintains during a full hour of combat, but it gives us an idea of what ballpark the hypermatter numbers are in. -- Darth Culator  (Talk)(TINC) 17:24, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
 * It does. "Hypermatter" (Chemical symbol Bs) is a handy invention for when you need to explain how sci-fi ships the size of moons can travel half a galaxy in less than a day without shoving massive red giant stars into a giant furnace for use as fuel. ;P VT-16 17:33, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
 * Thank God for hypermatter. ;) Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 21:36, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
 * Would you need so much matter? A spoonful of matter converted into energy would destroy a city.  A houseful would crack the earth.--Herbsewell 21:41, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
 * Well, powering Star Destroyers for a long time would require matter that wouldn't destroy the ship. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 21:44, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
 * So the reactors are just inefficient?--Herbsewell 21:46, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
 * Or maybe hypermatter is just plain better. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 21:48, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
 * Yes but why would you need it if converting matter into energy is enough to power anything?--Herbsewell 21:51, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
 * Maybe they just found out that hypermatter proved better than regular matter in the long run. In any case, your questions really can't be answered. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 21:54, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
 * Well that's no reason for them not be asked.--Herbsewell 21:55, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
 * Yes, it is. There's no point in asking questions that can't be answered. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 21:57, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
 * You're kidding right?--Herbsewell 21:58, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
 * No. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 22:00, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
 * Do you realize that most of modern thinking is based on the premise of "asking questions that can't be answered"?--Herbsewell 22:03, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
 * But these questions of yours could only be answered in a Galaxy far, far away. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 22:52, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
 * Or Leland Chee.--Herbsewell 23:09, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
 * True... Worth a shot. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 23:10, 28 November 2006 (UTC)

Just putting this out there but did u ever think that maybe the star wars people didnt do the actual calculations and just threw out a random number to confuse and piss off fans69.26.85.141 23:15, 28 November 2006 (UTC) I believe the whole point of hypermatter was to explain all the impossible physics of Star Wars. From my limited understanding of the situation, the destruction of Alderaan required more energy than could be produced if the mass of the entire DSI was converted directly into energy and infused into Alderaan's core. So we invent a form of fuel that's so powerful that the "stellar fuel bottles" around the DS reactor core contain enough to perform the station's otherwise-impossible feats.
 * Jack there has to be a better way to end these discussions besides saying ambiguously that it'll be brought up to Chee and he'll sort it out.--Herbsewell 23:18, 28 November 2006 (UTC)
 * I'm not try to end the discussion. I was just saying that we should try asking Chee. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 00:44, 29 November 2006 (UTC)
 * Well Jack in these discussions it either "ends", (and by ends I mean the issue is almost considered ended) in two ways. (1) We say that we Leland Chee we'll figure it out, or (2) We argue with each other on some personal interest until someone breaks us up.--Herbsewell 11:32, 29 November 2006 (UTC)
 * Well, I'm not trying to end it, even if it seems that asking Leland Chee is ending it. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 12:05, 29 November 2006 (UTC)

I think it's unlikely that the actual statistics of hypermatter have been quantified in canon, but combining the "fuel cell" concept from the RPG with the annihilation rate from the ICS can give us some ideas. -- Darth Culator  (Talk)(TINC) 15:02, 29 November 2006 (UTC)
 * Yeah, that's true. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 20:27, 29 November 2006 (UTC)
 * My lead-ball analogy earlier (which somebody deleted) came from asking just that question. What is hypermatter.  If I had a fist full of it, would it weigh as much as an asteroid?  Could it power Minneapolis for a year?  I don't expect Lucas to invent every little detail of the stuff, just give us something beyond "40,000 tons/second"  If those cruisers are lifting 2 years of fuel, repulsers must be dirt cheap.
 * Well, we need to ask Chee. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 12:17, 1 December 2006 (UTC)
 * I think it's best to assume that the reactors are inefficient and do not completely convert the matter into energy (if they did they would have no exhaust). It may be possible that wile hypermatter converts into energy when it combines with regular matter, the reactors can not completely utilize and store the energy (though I'm at a loss as to what happens to the exhaust because it should be able to destroy an entire planet by itself).  The best science fiction authors that write in a technologically progressing universe make the technology seem light years ahead of the current real world technology but always leave room for improvement.  That's probably the reason why a lot of fans disliked Dark Empire because it was ridiculous how technologically advanced they had become in only a few years (like tanks absorbing laser fire and aircraft that housed pilot's brains).--Herbsewell 02:52, 2 December 2006 (UTC)
 * Yeah, I suppose so. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 14:14, 2 December 2006 (UTC)
 * Has anyone done any research on this subject?--Herbsewell 17:17, 2 December 2006 (UTC)
 * Define "research". Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 20:46, 2 December 2006 (UTC)
 * As in someone has a canon, scientific explanation on this.--Herbsewell 21:12, 2 December 2006 (UTC)
 * Then no, I don't have any research on it. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 21:13, 2 December 2006 (UTC)
 * Don't assume I was speaking of you. I was asking if there was a canon explanation made by some official.--Herbsewell 21:23, 2 December 2006 (UTC)
 * I know you weren't speaking of me. I was just answering your question. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 21:30, 2 December 2006 (UTC)
 * "I don't have any research", you said that as if I was asking it of you.--Herbsewell 21:32, 2 December 2006 (UTC)
 * Well, it seemed like a question directed to anyone at the time. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 21:42, 2 December 2006 (UTC)
 * It was. I was asking if anyone had, not you.  If I had wanted that information I would have asked it.--Herbsewell 23:06, 2 December 2006 (UTC)
 * So you were asking everyone but me. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 23:08, 2 December 2006 (UTC)
 * I asked in the continuity thread on starwars.com, but I doubt there's anything beyond the tidbits in the ICS. -- Darth Culator  (Talk)(TINC) 23:12, 2 December 2006 (UTC)
 * No. If someone had done research I had expected someone to tell me.  I expected someone to say that someone had done it and then they would give me a source.  If I wanted to know if you specifically had done research I would have asked it.--Herbsewell 23:13, 2 December 2006 (UTC)
 * Culator: It's unfortunate, because I think you're right. Herbsewell: I don't want a big issue out of this, but you said "No" to my question, and then you said "If I wanted to know if you specifically had done research I would have asked it". It seems like that's yes and no. But, like I said, I don't want another issue. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 23:15, 2 December 2006 (UTC)
 * I never contradicted myself. I was asking if anyone had done research.--Herbsewell 23:17, 2 December 2006 (UTC)
 * Whatever. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 23:18, 2 December 2006 (UTC)

As the person who wrote Jedi Counseling 94, I can shed some light on the subject. First, I had to make different sources on fuels and consumption rates match up. Star Wars Adventure Journal #5 first introduced the concept of a fuel cell (specifically, the Imperial Mark IV Fuel Cell) along with what 1 fuel cell could do, how many a tramp freighter (in this case, a YT-1300) would hold, and how much they cost to replace (50 credits). Second, the Star Wars Roleplaying Game Core Rulebook (and Revised Core Rulebook) both establish that 1 kg of fuel costs 50 credits. Given this, and starting with the assumption that the fuel in the Core Rulebook is the same as the fuel in fuel cells, it was possible to calculate that a fuel cell holds 1 kg of fuel. After that, I worked from the assumption that for every increase in size category, a ship uses 10 times as much fuel. (A size category is approximately doubled in all dimensions, sometimes a bit more, so it averages out to about a tenfold increase in mass.) From this, and using the rules established in Adventure Journal #6, it was possible to calculate that a Venator would hold 736 fuel cells, a total weight of 73,600 metric tons of fuel.

However, I was keenly aware of the numbers in ROTS:ICS (I'd referenced them extensively when writing the Revenge of the Sith Collection for the Wizards of the Coast website), and I was also aware that the mass annihilation Saxton lists was derived assuming that relatively normal real-world physics were at work (e.g. calculating energy based on the luminance and size of engines, assuming that thrust was emitted at near the speed of light, etc.) -- and, more importantly, his numbers absolutely would not work if they represented "real" weights. (Even assuming that peak power consumption is 24 times faster than normal, meaning it would only have to last 736 hours, it would require fuel stores of 1.06x10^11 metic tons -- that is far too much because the thrust Saxton calculated as being required would no longer be enough to move the ship while it carried that fuel.)

Thus, I concluded that the masses listed in ROTS:ICS were "virtual" mass. Here's how it works (and it's essentially based on the same technology as inertial compensators): The sublight drives on starships (e.g. H-K ion engines, etc.) produce a limited warping of the space-time continuum that makes the starship's mass relative to the rest of the universe much lower than it "really" is; by doing so, the motive thrust provided by a given mass of reaction mass accelerated to a given velocity is multiplied, thereby making absurdly high accelerations (thousands of Gs) over extended periods possible without carrying insane amounts of reaction mass. In this case, the "relative mass gradient" works out to 1.44x10^6-to-1. (As a comparison, this relative mass gradient would allow the real-world space shuttle to reach orbit using about 2.6 pounds of fuel.) So, in conclusion, it's not hypermatter itself at work here -- it's just the complex inner workings of sublight engines themselves that make the relative masses of the ship much lower than that of the reaction mass, and this virtual mass is reported in ROTS:ICS because that's what would traditionally be used for calculating things like specific impulse and so forth.

(Also, in addition to my word as the Jedi Counselor, this is the reasoning I put in comments on the column when it was sent to Leeland and company for approval -- given that they approved it for publication, I'm assuming they agreed that my behind-the-scenes explanation was a reasonable way to justify the two radically different numbers as well as a way to explain the incredibly large numbers in ROTS:ICS.) -- Gary M. Sarli (Jedi Counselor) 00:09, 1 January 2007 (UTC)
 * ...I have no idea what you just said, but I'll take your word for it. -- SFH 00:26, 1 January 2007 (UTC)
 * I'm glad we have a Star Wars author here to help us out. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 00:33, 1 January 2007 (UTC)
 * That sounds reasonable. Thanks for the clarification, Mr. Sarli. :D VT-16 15:56, 4 January 2007 (UTC)
 * Indeed. Hopefully Mr. Sarli can help us out with other things as well. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 21:22, 4 January 2007 (UTC)
 * Well he does have a life..unlike us.--Herbsewell 21:44, 4 January 2007 (UTC)
 * That was unnecessary and rude, Herbsewell. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 21:46, 4 January 2007 (UTC)

Wouldn't it be easier to say that the fuel itself is converted at a 1.44e6: 1 mass ratio in the reactor?

Not to be rude, but I think it would be so much better if the authors went with what have already been established and use that as a proper basis instead. Northerner 05:34, 5 January 2007 (UTC)
 * He did. He had two conflicting accounts he had to reconcile, with one of them having serious physical ramifications.  He did so rather brilliantly. jSarek 05:59, 5 January 2007 (UTC)
 * Sorry, I don't see what needed to be reconciled. There's no reason to believe that the fuel cell above was necessarily a hypermatter fuel cell- if you read JC94, you'll see the rule presupposes that there is simply one kind of fuel in all the galaxy. Starfighters do not all equip hypermatter reactors, as we know from the canon- its the minority, if any. Basically, it's a good illustration of the abstraction and such you'll use for an RPG ruleset, and should not be rigorously applied to the entirety of the canon as a whole (ie. a Venator-class Star Destroyer does not carry 736 100 metric ton capacity fuel cells- check the RotS:ICS). And as a point of logic- a fuel cell costing 50 credits and 1kg of fuel (assuming its the same fuel, which is not guaranteed) costingg 50 credits does not mean that a 50 credit fuel cell carries 1kg of fuel.Vymer 06:32, 5 January 2007 (UTC)
 * EDIT Addendum: i.e., the EGV&V, page xv (preface): "Most ships rely on power cells, although the Hoersch-Kessel drive can be converted to use heavy metals, liquid reactants, or virtually any substance as fuel." That's just the HK drive, note. We know that hypermatter reactors don't power every ship in the galaxy (ie. certainly not starfighters, as assumed by the rule), and we also know that fusion reactors are used to confine the hypermatter reactors on large warships (AotC:ICS, page 3): "most starships use fusion systems that confine more-powerful hypermatter annihilation cores" . A fuel cell need not have anything to do with the hypermatter reactor directly whatsoever.Vymer 06:59, 5 January 2007 (UTC)
 * I should also point out that the mass figures are for the purpose of determining peak power output of the various reactors. These are explicitly listed in Watts in the AotC:ICS. Are the ships annihilating "virtual" mass to achieve this power output? (obviously, that's nonsensical.) This is afterall where the 3.6x10^24W figure on the article comes from. It's a non-explicit tool for conveying power output that's already been explicitly detailed in the same orders of magnitude in other sources.Vymer 06:44, 5 January 2007 (UTC)
 * *Paging Dr. Hawking. Paging Dr. Hawking. Your assistance is needed.* -- Riffsyphon1024 07:07, 5 January 2007 (UTC)
 * LOL. Actually I'd say Dr. Saxton, the author :) Vymer 07:10, 5 January 2007 (UTC)

"He did. He had two conflicting accounts he had to reconcile, with one of them having serious physical ramifications. He did so rather brilliantly."

No, he worked from his own assumptions and there aren't any "serious physical ramifications" as those assumptions are flawed and with little regard for established sources. We've also started to see Star Wars being turned into Star Trek. However, it might work as game mechanics. Edit: Also, remember that we see the Falcon and various fighters being refueled in several scenes. Northerner 17:48, 5 January 2007 (UTC)
 * So... ? Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 20:41, 5 January 2007 (UTC)
 * That was my two cents, that's all (we don't see fuel cells being replaced, we see ships being refuelled (see the OT: ICS). It's a very interesting and intriguing idea, but the author should've relied more on what has already been established and also not to use assumptions. It seems as if it has become more common that the various authors rewrites, changes the meaning to what other authors have established and introduces their own take on things rather than to add to what has already been established. I have the highest respect for Mr. Sarli, but in this case, I don't quite agree. Northerner 21:34, 5 January 2007 (UTC)


 * Oh, now I see what you mean by that refueling thing. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 22:16, 5 January 2007 (UTC)
 * My apologies for being unclear. Northerner 22:21, 5 January 2007 (UTC)


 * Don't worry about it. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 22:25, 5 January 2007 (UTC)

"Mr. Sarli's" explanation
I'm going to be posting this at TFN as well, but I'm posting it here at the source too.

I want to preface this by stating it will be a long post, but I would hope everyone will read it through. I've put it through a couple of revisions for clarity, as my schedule is probably not going to let me respond past a couple more days.

As this is a scientific and logic issue, I think the first thing we need to do is approach this from a scientific and logical perspective. If anyone takes issue with that, then I would point out that you cannot consistently state that logic is irrelevant without contradicting your own statement. So pipe down. :)

The first mistake I see people making here is treating this as a canon statement. It isn't.

Firstly, we don't know that this person is in fact Gary Sarli. It's not like lying on a wiki is that complicated. If I register the name "God" over there, I do not gain the ability to damn souls to hell and smite people with lightening bolts (though that would be pretty bad-ass). Neither does someone posting as Gary Sarli gain the authority to make canon statements there. Secondly they are speaking outside any approved channel. Wookiepedia is not a LFL endorsed site, and has no business connection with them. It is by the fans and for the fans. If we treat it as a canon source, then any yahoo who wants can edit whatever they want into canon. Thirdly, the logic that "they approved what they published, therefore they also approved what they refused to publish" is clearly false - if they approved it as well, they would have published it. That they didn't is clear evidence they rejected it. And if you disregard point 3, then the same reasoning would apply to SWTC - after all, it is the supporting argument for everything Dr Saxton wrote. Taking that to the illogical extreme, since Mike Wong contributed to most SWTC pages and is thanked by Dr Saxton in the ICS books he wrote, that would mean that everything on Mike Wong's site is now canon as well. I would like to take this opportunity to then point out I have stated that there are 300 quadrillion clones in the GAR there. Which is now canon. So nyah.

Or, you know, we could realize that what some guy posts in a wiki is just that - what he posted in a wiki, and carries no canon authority and in this case serves only to make him look like a fool. Which is really why the internet exists anyways - making people look like fools. Well, that and for looking at porn.

Now on to the other issue with this - people are claiming that this alters the number in the ICS, dropping the annihilation rates and correspondingly, all the numbers. This is again, false. Read the statement again - the numbers presented are the virtual mass, not the total. He is basically saying that the ships get to carry the fuel for free, not that the numbers there are now to be altered. Besides, the person we know for certain to be Gary Sarli already altered the numbers to his whim on the WOTC site anyways when he put out the gaming stats, there is no need for him to do it again.

If you chose to ignore what the post actually states in favor of your own interpretation, allow me to point out that you have then created a severe set of contradictions: 1) We have the explicit statements of the power of these vessels in the AOTC:ICS. 2) You then have issues with the clear statements in the ROTS:ICS itself - how does the ship repeatedly fire teraton level cannon shots (a 10 Richter earthquake releases 1 teraton or 4.2*10^21 joules) from each barrel of is 14 quad guns when its peak power would be only 7.5*10^17 watts? 3) As the post itself states, the values Dr. Saxton provided come from calculations based off the movies. The movies cannot be disregarded, so the numbers stand firm.  Meaning that when push comes to shove this wiki post is the one that has to give.

So the numbers stand. But what of the post itself? Well the problem with this post, like the post from Mr. Sarli on the LFL approved site in JC94 doesn't work.

Firstly, it is based off some bizarre assumptions. As Icehawk pointed out, it is impossible for all ships to use the same number of these fuel cells to get the same performance. The idea that ships massively different in peak power, size, design, and use can accomplish the exact same amount of work with the power extracted from the same amount of fuel is beyond stupid. Even for something as simple a firing a weapon needs to account that different ships have different weapons with different yields that will of course require different amounts of energy to fire! How that got approved is beyond me unless when the continuity department signed off on it they intended it to be game mechanics, which are non-canon.

Secondly, the idea that they scale up an order of magnitude with each class size is simply random. Even ships in the same class size have wildly different fuel consumption rates. Again, I think this points to the fact that LFL expected these ideas about fuel cells to be game mechanics and thus irrelevant.

Third, the use of fuel cells has been retconned away many times over - the X-wing series of books have them using tanks rather then cells. The AOTC:ICS has them using fuel silos. Even the films showed them pumping fuel into the X-wings rather then swapping out sets of fuel cells. The idea that they physically replace fuel cells is contradicted by other higher canon a multitude of times. At best the idea of them, like the broken economy of the RPG and most of Galaxies, should be treated as game mechanics.

Fourth, the idea that the fuel supplies for these ships must allow for peak power operation for days on end is contradicted by canon statements, common sense, and reality. The AOTC:ICS was quite clear when it stated peak power only lasted for hours. This is unsurprising, given the requisite consumption rates. While the consumables undoubtedly will last for weeks or months, most of the time the ship will not be operating at peak power! Like real warships, most of its time will be spent making port calls or in transit. These require very little power - in fact starships have the advantage here as transit requires no power for them. They need only make a brief initial burn and they can coast the rest of the way. These brief burns would be low power ones of only a handful of Gs as high power operations would devastate the infrastructure of the system they were in (oops, our exhaust stream just vaporized your space station! Our bad.) Further, high power operations are unnecessary - a 10 G burn for 10 minutes will get you from earth to mars in 11 days, which is about the duration of a short training session on an aircraft carrier. I would sincerely doubt that even a mighty star dreadnought needs more then a few terawatts or power when idling. This would easily let them stretch the fuel onboard for a few hours of peak operation to weeks or months of normal, low level operation.

Now let us deal with the “scientific explanation” presented in the post itself. The idea, that you can carry the mass for free is pretty far out there. I suppose that one could try to validate it with canon by claiming that the statement in the AOTC:ICS about complex mass meant that the mass itself was complex and thus its “real mass” variable, the sentence makes equal sense read as though the systems are advanced and difficult to understand. To me, the latter is a superior interpretation, but your mileage may vary. However if you tried the former explanation, you then have the contradiction of the source for the missing mass – the engines, or the fuel?

However the idea of missing mass, virtual mass, or complex mass is difficult to reconcile with the rest of physics and what we observe. While the virtual mass may not exert its inertia on the space craft, the ship would still have to pay out the energy to move the mass within a gravity well, as we would see during takeoff or landing. The Venator class would have a “virtual mass” of 4*10^11 kgs. Its total mass including these fuel cells would now be 5.87*10^17 kgs. To remove this much mass to orbit from a 1 G planet would require 3.5*10^25 joules! Releasing that much energy into a viable biosphere will quickly remove the “viable” part of that statement. Even taking a very long time to ascend will barely mitigate the issue. And when compared with observed times for other ships it is hard to make that explanation mesh with canon. If we ignore this “virtual mass” suggestion however and assume that the ships total mass includes its fuel, then the value steeply drops to 2.4*10^18 joules, well within the capacity of its shields to absorb, particularly is spread out over a period of time.

Next you have the problem of thrust. If the effect begins in the engines, that means it is going to affect the fuel. Which means you are still going to have to expend enough to accelerate the total mass, because the mass of the ejecta (and thus its resultant counterforce on the ship) are going to be lowered by a factor of 1.44*10^6. And since you need to accelerate the mass, you need to consume the fuel to get the energy. In other words, this “solution” is nothing of the sort, all it does it arbitrarily inflate the total mass of the ship, introduce several new problems, and leave the original problem it was meant to solve still standing! The comparison to the space shuttle is completely false.

After that you have the fact that this is a field effect. It has to affect everything inside the ship. And that includes people. You can design pumps and turbines and other machines to deal with this sudden change in inertia, but not the body of whatever random recruit you slap in a uniform and put on the ship. The heart evolved to pump a set amount of fluid with a certain amount of inertia against a certain amount of resistance. Drop that inertia and its going to throw the flow out of wack because the same force will be imparted to a fluid that will not react the same way. End result: heart attack, crewman dies. Same for things like trying to stand – fluid in you inner ear doesn’t react well, you have no sense of balance. Respiration? Same problem as the heart, the air now has its inertia lowered by a factor of 1.44*10^6, your lungs deflate. How about basic cellular chemistry. Wait, no, different inertia will alter basic things like protein folding. And there’s no counter for this either – any magic system that would apply inertia to only the things that impact humans would have to operate on a subatomic level, tracking everything and applying just the right amount of counter –effect. Except the Hiesenburg uncertainty principle states you can’t know everything about something, so it is flat out impossible to apply the right amount of force at the right vector at the right time. Since the people don’t all drop dead the second they set foot onboard a starship, we know without a doubt that this system does not exist.

Finally, there is a fuel problem – fitting it into the hull without it initiating fusion. The requisite densities surpass those seen in star formation, but are still less then those associated with degenerate matter. So while the numbers are not contradicted, figuring them out necessitates some very odd tech or fuel silo designs. However, if you try and increase it by a factor of 1.44*10^ this problem is massively magnified. The fuel would have to be denser then neutronium – to the point of a singularity in the case of the Death Stars. This clearly is not the case, as we can see, again, in the movies.

So basically, what this comes down to is a noncanon statement from someone who for all we know has no authority to make canon statements in an attempt to correct a problem that does not exist due to existing canon and previous retcons, that does not in fact correct the problem, but compounds the existing problem, introduces a host of new problems, and is flat out contradicted by canon.

In short, it is crap, ignore it. -- Daniel K 2007 (UTC) 2) What he wrote is official. This is seperate from canon.  Game mechanics are not now, nor have they ever been canon.  This is Lucasfilm policy, so whatever you think is irrelevent. -- Daniel-K
 * You don't decide what's canon and what's not. What Mr. Sarli said is canon, because he wrote it into canon. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 14:53, 7 January
 * Its on a wiki page, not an approved channel. That makes it noncanon.  What part of that is difficult to grasp?  And the fact that game mechanics are noncanon has been long standing Lucasfilm policy.  I'm not determining anything.  I'm pointing out the facts of the situation. -- Daniel-K
 * Mr. Sarli wrote that article, so it is canon, whether you like it or not. Don't complain about things you have no control over. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 17:42, 7 January 2007 (UTC)
 * 1) Prove that is Mr. Sarli there. Anyone can register any name on a wiki
 * Stop it now. It's canon. Get over it. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 20:08, 7 January 2007 (UTC)
 * And besides, Wookieepedia is not the place to argue against canon. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 20:30, 7 January 2007 (UTC)
 * The explanation posted here is no more canon than anything you or I might post. The only thing that's official is what is written in a licensed source. And game mechanics are generally ignored unless they are referenced in other works and don't contradict other sources. -- Darth Culator  (Talk)(Kills) 22:06, 7 January 2007 (UTC)
 * By "explanation posted here", do you mean "Daniel K"'s arguement? Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 01:06, 8 January 2007 (UTC)
 * No, he means Mr Sarli's explanation, and he's correct- there's no way that's canon. Daniel-K's post is in reply to that.Vymer 02:03, 8 January 2007 (UTC)
 * Seeing what this truly does (and it's a bit embarassing since I had an education that included physics and matter/energy transfers, but it's been years since I had this kind of stuff), I now retract my support. If it only creates more problems, it's a problem. Since it also only appeared in a set of game stats, it can be counted as game mechanics and nothing is gained or lost by it. Official articles do cover those mechanics as well, Jack. VT-16 11:38, 8 January 2007 (UTC)
 * Well, let's see if Mr. Sarli has anything to say about it. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 12:04, 8 January 2007 (UTC)
 * Asking a person who's essentially anonymous and doesn't appear to have that kind of background to say even more about a technical issue? VT-16 12:07, 8 January 2007 (UTC)
 * Fine. I'm done with this. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 12:10, 8 January 2007 (UTC)
 * I'm not against reconciling different sources, and I've read plenty of good stuff by Mr. Sarli, but if this particular piece doesn't quite gel with the strictly technical sources (which it appears it doesn't, since there is plenty of different fuel sources in the GFFA and I doubt they all take up the same space at the same prices (which in itself seems to rely on rules from gameplay, again)), then it's less than beneficial. Now, the information by Gary Sarli on the WOTC site, was in a column mostly aimed at answering questions from players, primarily on game play issues. I don't think we should take it as anything more than what's useful for the players themselves to know, given issues with game rules etc. :) VT-16 14:11, 8 January 2007 (UTC)

I don't have time at the moment to give a lengthy explanation of why Daniel-K's objections aren't correct (I'm finishing the Saga Edition at the moment), but here's the short version:

1) I never said all vehicles use the same fuel, either here or in the article. (Saying I did and then pointing out how ridiculous such an assertion would be is a straw man argument.)  The article specifically avoids mentioning types of fuels and their relative densities and so forth because we want to avoid establishing a firm number that can inadvertantly cause continuity problems.

2) I also never said that I assumed that a ship must be able to produce its peak power output for months or years -- in fact, the Jedi Counseling article in question specifically says otherwise. Straw man, table of two.

3) If you really, honestly think that a ship can accelerate at 3,000 Gs for any period using pure Newtonian physics (i.e. no "balonium" adjustment of relative mass), then you have clearly not considered all the ramifications involved. The energy output for such acceleration on something the size of the Venator would be the equivalent of 857.1 teratons of explosives -- and that energy has to go somewhere (i.e. into the exhaust).  Such a ridiculously large amount of energy would completely destroy the biosphere of any planet that is anywhere near by -- it's the same amount of energy you'd get from crashing SEVENTEEN 10-km asteroids into the Earth simultaneously (and remember that just ONE killed the dinosaurs at the end of the Cretaceous).  And, worse, it would produce that much energy EVERY SINGLE SECOND!  If this were the way things really worked, the Millenium Falcon would have incinerated Mos Eisley (and most of that side of the planet) when it took off in Episode IV, and no one would have bothered building the Death Star because any random ship could annihilate a planet in a few seconds or minutes at most.

Now, do you see any reason why you might need to change the laws of physics and assume that the SW universe found a way around this?

4) The idea with changing the mass into a virtual mass isn't to add this to the already-existing masses on the ship -- that's idiotic, and I am forced to assume that it's another straw man argument. Changing the mass has one effect: It lets you say that the ship is able to accelerate and otherwise behave on-screen AS IF it really used that much energy.  It doesn't mean the ship's "real" mass changes, just that the effect of reaction mass in generating acceleration is multiplied by whatever factor is necessary to produce plausible results.

5) The source of this problem is ultimately Dr. Saxton -- he's a great guy and very intelligent, but he doesn't think about the nth-degree ramifications of writing a number like that. The simple fact is that in a fictional universe (science fiction, science fantasy, space opera, or whatever), you MUST be aware that "balonium" is going to be necessary from time to time because the people writing the stories and creating the animation weren't thinking about joules and watts and so forth, not even the tiniest bit.  Saxton lets himself be a little too beholden to the KNOWN laws of physics without really considering that the Star Wars universe may know a lot of "short cuts" and "cheat codes" that we don't. You can certainly calculate how much energy it would require to accelerate ships of the observed size in the observed manner, but the number will be so unreasonable that you should consider what alternate explanations (read: new laws of physics) would make it fit contuinity better. In this case, it kills planets and requires that the Venator's fuel weigh thousands of times more than the Venator itself. (Go crunch the numbers for specific impulse, delta-v, and so forth -- you'll see what I mean, and it gets to the point where the Venator's acceleration changes astronomically depending on if it just topped off the tank or not.)

6) And, even given all of the above, my comments are not canon -- but they are the internal explanation that I came up with and Leeland approved, so you might expect this to become an official part of continuity at some point. (I can't talk about stuff that I'm working on right now due to non-disclosure agreements.)

In conclusion, is it really any wonder that those of us who do this stuff for Star Wars don't bother coming to discuss these things with you more often? Treating an author who is spending his own time to share a bit of behind-the-scenes information with you like this is nothing short of shameful. Insulting the intelligence or questioning the veracity of someone who is DOING YOU A FAVOR is pretty low, and it's stuff like that that gives fans a bad name. Gary M. Sarli (Jedi Counselor) 15:48, 8 January 2007 (UTC)

Fans are knowledgeable and a resource (I don't see why some authors can't recognize that). Ultimately, it's we who buy the stuff you produce. And to say that "The source of this problem is ultimately Dr. Saxton" was very low IMHO. Dr. Saxton (as well as a multitude of fans) has produced a wide range of calculations and reasoning and while non-canon, these pages here and here are examples of that. But thanks for sharing your thoughts. Northerner 17:39, 8 January 2007 (UTC)

I want to point out that all indications, not just starship accelerations, point to thousands of tons of fuel annihilated per second. For example, the Base Delta Zero operation, calculated here to require at least 10^22 W of power, will require the annihilation of over a thousand tons of fuel per second -- and that's a lower limit. The upper limit is two orders of magnitude higher. I've not the time to read this whole conversation, so I'll just throw this out there for whomever wants to use it. -- A concerned maximalist fan


 * Regarding point 3). Yes, if the exhaust stream of a Venator hits a planet it will depopulate the planet, just as blowing up a five hundred mile wide metal sphere over a planet will also depopulate it.  This is the inevitable side effect of the power required to accelerate the ship.  The solution is for the Star Destroyer's commander to be very careful where he points his ship's exhaust stream.  Alternately, this could be one reason many major planets have shields- to protect them from engine wash as much as from attack.
 * In addendum to this, I believe ships operate on repulsor when they're in gravity wells; this is why, for example, the backwash of the Millenium Falcon's engines didn't depopulate Mos Eisley. Also, in order to produce maximum thrust, the engine exhaust would naturally be vectored into what would be a column on scales measured in less than AUs (it's actually a cone, but it's a reeeealllly stretched-out cone, so up close by the ISD, it looks like a column).  It's rather difficult to hit a planet with that, especially when you can do with less than thousands of Gs. - Concerned maximalist returns
 * Regarding point 5)- Occam's Razor states that when two explanations for a given phenomenom, both of which are consistent with all observations, are offered, the simpler explanation prevails. In this case there is the option between a)"A Venator actually generates enough power to provide 3000G acceleration" and b)"A Venator doesn't generate enough power to provide 3000G, but technobable can do X, Y & Z so it's acceleration is 3000G anyway".  Option a) is clearly favoured by Occam's Razor.  This is the solution chosen by Dr. Saxton, his solution does not contradict canon, therefore "if it aint broke don't fix it".  MartinMcCann 19:02, 8 January 2007 (UTC)


 * For the record, there was no Endor Holocaust. The destruction of the second Death Star didn't cause Ewoks to go extinct; therefore, the exaust of a Venator wouldn't do practically any damage. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 21:17, 8 January 2007 (UTC)


 * What has the Endor Holocaust (which I don't agree with either) have to do with this? That's a red herring. Northerner 21:34, 8 January 2007 (UTC)
 * "Yes, if the exhaust stream of a Venator hits a planet it will depopulate the planet, just as blowing up a five hundred mile wide metal sphere over a planet will also depopulate it". I was only disproving this statement of yours. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 21:35, 8 January 2007 (UTC)
 * Ok, adding some hopefully constructive material here, in my (Norwegian) copy of AOTC:ICS the part about energy sources on the first page says (translated): "Energy sources: In starships and other craft there is used a variety of different energy-sources that were perfected in past eras. Craft for local use with low combustion are driven by light chemical engines or fission/fusion reactors. They run on whatever fuel can be found in the area. In starships, more powerful annihilation-reactors are the norm. The inner portion of the most powerful warships is dominated by huge reactor-cores and ultracompact fuel-siloes that make them capable of massive planetary assaults and withstanding enormous acceleration for hours before the tanks need refueling. Gravitational-technology: In the modern galactic civilization, gravity has long since been placed under control. Among the most common devices, are the repulsorlifts that make unmotorized hovering possible, tractorbeam-projectors that work at a distance and compensators that prevent passengers and crew from being torn apart by the acceleration during manouvers. The active components in these devices consist of subatomic knots of space-time, manufactured in enormous unmanned energy refineries built around black holes. Hyperspace: Hyperdrives allow travels through the strange world known as hyperspace, which is the regular universe when seen from a ship that's flying faster than the speed of light. Hyperdrive affects the particles of so-called hypermatter (superlight-matter), to make jumps to lightspeed without changing the ship's complex mass and energy."

- AOTC:ICS, p.3

"In the siloes, reaction-matter is compacted into enormous density."

- AOTC:ICS, p.23

Also, an annihilation-reactor for hypermatter is identified on the core ship page, at the center of the vessel. From what I understand, the regular matter is basically used for normal space travel (acceleration/decceleration), while the more exotic hypermatter is somehow tapped into for lightspeed travel. Anything beside this is covered by coasting through space without engine power or repulsorlifts to and from a surface. Please correct me if I'm wrong aboit this.
 * In conclusion, is it really any wonder that those of us who do this stuff for Star Wars don't bother coming to discuss these things with you more often? Treating an author who is spending his own time to share a bit of behind-the-scenes information with you like this is nothing short of shameful.
 * This is hard for all of us to evaluate when none of us can be sure we're dealing with an actual LFL affiliate and not just someone pretending to be who they say they are.

And, Jack, I think you're using slightly false analogies. As dumb as some of the old sources may be, some of them provided a partial explanation for why the DS II didn't fry off Han and Leia in the seconds after the blow, or why the moon was still habited years later (I think it was The Glow of Darth Vader, with a wormhole something-something attracting much of the mass and energy and draining it from the orbit). Not the same kind of conditions as with a starship that's operating at full engine capacity near a surface. VT-16 22:16, 8 January 2007 (UTC)
 * Wreckage still fell to Endor. There was a wormhole, but it still didn't get all the debris. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 22:51, 8 January 2007 (UTC)
 * That's true, and ITW:OT mentions both localized shields being sent to the surface and Rebel vessels blasting or diverting some of it. Still had to be brutal for much of the lands we don't see afterwards. ;) VT-16 22:59, 8 January 2007 (UTC)
 * Well, apparently those efforts made by Rebels didn't turn out so good. I remember someone saying the wreck of a Star Destroyer landed on Endor. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 23:03, 8 January 2007 (UTC)

Lets deal with the accusations that I'm incorrect here

1) The type of fuel is irrelevent. 1 kilogram of fuel will still at the most only get you 9*10^16 joules.  It could be hydrogen, uranium, or twinkies.  You still can't get greater then 9*10^16 joules from a single kilogram of matter.

2) JC 94 clearly states it is going to be burning massive amounts of fuel sitting in orbit, an action that requires no power at all!' So yes, the article does treat the reactors as running at full power.

3) Yes, the power levels to accelerate at thousands of Gs would give a starship the ability to devestate a planet. Amazingly, the ships are also repeatedly stated and shown in canon to be capable of doing this!  A Base Delta Zero order gives a ship the ability to melt the crust of a planet to molten rock in a matter of minutes.  Standard ships can wipe out all life on a planet without a problem - hence the importance of planetary shields, system patrol craft, and the tight restrictions about using repulsors within 6 planetary diameters that was canonically stated in the 1976 ANH novel.  I have a very difficult time believing that the continuity people at LFL would throw out mountians of canon in favor of this.

And no, I see no reason to assume they found a way around the laws of physics since the book that came out in 1976 states that antigravity is used within 6 planetary diameters of a planet. Why invent an explanation when a canon one has been around since the beginning?

4) The idea that the virtual mass was seperate was the only way I could figure that this was not an attempt to proclaim that his vision of canon overroad everything else already established, not a strawman.

5) So basically, since you don't understand it, it must be wrong because your intuition overrides canon evidence. Nice. I find it hilarious that you assert that Dr. Saxton, a man known for meticilous research and explanations, didn't think things through when your "solution" kills everyone as soon as they step aboard the ship.  As to the numbers, well Mr. Sarli, I have crunched the numbers.  If you want, I can provide them here.  And no, it does not create any problems.  Peak operation is limited to only a few hours yes, but it all works out.  Your assertion that the acceleration must change with the fuel load is blatently at odds with actual rocketry - it doesn't happen in real life because they alter the mass flow rate of the exhaust.

You are doing us no favors here "Mr. Sarli" - you are using a medium (science fiction) that was initially invented to help explain science and its power to promote pseudoscience. You may fell that pointing out the absurdity of any assertions is insulting, but I would suggest you consider how those who have actually done the math required feel to be told that unlike you, with your "kill everyone onbaord the ship" plan, have not thought things through. -- Daniel-K
 * Maybe Mr. Sarli is incorrect on some things, but that doesn't give you the right to speak rudely to him or question his identity. You have gone way out of line, Daniel K. Stop it now. Saying rude things to him is not going to do yourself any good. In fact, it only degrades yourself. If you can't speak kindly in questioning someone else, don't speak at all. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 01:04, 9 January 2007 (UTC)
 * And Wookieepedia is not a forum. Take your arguement to a forum and keep it off of Wookieepedia from now on. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 01:05, 9 January 2007 (UTC)
 * And here's an admin voice backing him up. Mr. Sarli was generous enough to bring this here, and whether you like it or not, his proposal went through Licensing and got approval.  If you can't discuss things in a MUCH nicer manner, Daniel-K, you can spend some time on time-out.  jSarek 01:16, 9 January 2007 (UTC)
 * his proposal went through Licensing and got approval. No, it did not.  If it had, it would have been published.  This person quite clearly states that it is not canon.  And even if it had, it would still be contradicted by the films - which clearly don't show everyone dropping dead - and thus still be every bit as noncanon as the sources saying that Anakin and Vader are two seperate people. -- Daniel-K


 * I don't know. If he brings a reasonable argument on why the explanation is false than he should say it.--Herbsewell 02:14, 9 January 2007 (UTC)
 * The only thing that got approval was the rule. That explanation is not part of continuity, and hopefully, never will be. Daniel-K is absolutely right when he mentions that SW warships like Star Destroyers clearly *do* have the power to devastate the surface of a planet (and more besides), and I find it amazing that this uncontroversial canon fact beyond dispute didn't figure into Mr Sarli looking at Dr. Saxton's work and deciding to come up with a pseudosceintific absurd "cheat" to get around a non-existent problem (ie. his assumption that warships aren't actually capable of doing so). How servile should Daniel-K be, exactly? I find the whole "gives fans a bad name" thing absurd- I for one will never treat any author for SW different from anyone else- if anyone says something I think is absurd, I will call it absurd, no question. The last thing the fandom needs is a religious clergy who must be deferred to. The evidence, and nothing less, should speak for itself. In this case, it's clear.Vymer 02:34, 9 January 2007 (UTC)
 * I don't care if Mr. Sarli got it canonized that Star Destroyers are six inches long, if I see another angry "You are doing us no favors here"-type message I'm popping out the ban stick. Disagree with his reasoning all you want, but do it calmly and politely.  jSarek 04:33, 9 January 2007 (UTC)

I was only disproving this statement of yours. No, that wasn't my statement. Northerner 05:27, 9 January 2007 (UTC)
 * Just for the record, jSarek, if you have means to find this out, are you certain this is Gary Sarli posting on this page? I'm not willing to entertain some random internet troll pretending to be an LFL affiliate. Please clarify this person's identity. :/ VT-16 08:33, 9 January 2007 (UTC)
 * I'm not certain we have such a means, but I'm asking around about it. jSarek 10:19, 9 January 2007 (UTC)
 * Here's what Sannse was able to find out for me: 1) the IP he is posting from has had no other edits, including from logged in users, which reduces the chance of it being a regular playing silly games, and 2) the IP suggests a normal connection for someone in the New Jersey. When you add to that the fact that the text of the post seems quite legit with no red flags suggesting an imposter, I'm quite inclined to think it's genuinely him.  If that's not satisfactory, you could try emailing Mr. Sarli at jedicounseling@wizards.com or gmsarli@swrpgnetwork.com. jSarek 11:23, 9 January 2007 (UTC)
 * The thing that has me believing that this is someone trying to get others to swallow their fanon as true is that LFL is notorious for their NDAs. That's the reason there is so little from the AOTC:ICS and ROTS:ICS on Dr. Saxton's site and why authors who post at sw.com and TFN are so vague - its not that they are being cagey to increase demand, its because an army of lawyers will eat them alive if they reveal unapproved behidn the scenes information.  Now while Mr Sarli works for WotC instead of LFL, and that implies that there different staqndards, they can't be that different.  And even if it wasn't a legal issue, it would still be horrible office politics to violate the norm simply because you can.  Posting unapproved behind the scenes information here caries with it the risk of losing his job, or being transferred to a different Wizard client.  Add to that the fact that this exact argument was put forth a few months ago on TFN by a couple of fans, and the prospect that this is a real post becomes dubious, in my mind at least. -- Daniel-K
 * Then at least treat people with respect. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 21:55, 9 January 2007 (UTC)


 * Northerner: My mistake. I meant to say that to MartinMcCann, who made the statement I had copied. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 12:07, 9 January 2007 (UTC)
 * My point was that, given Saxton's extensive analysis of the Endor Holocaust, it's highly unlikely that he didn't consider the effects of an exhaust stream on a planet when he calculated the 40,000 tons/sec figure. MartinMcCann 12:42, 9 January 2007 (UTC)
 * Yeah, I have a feeling this will get mentioned in a thread on WOTC, and we'll look like ingrates for being so harsh. I don't agree with the antagonistic tone of some of the posts here, but it should be said that even if Saxton wrote the book, there are more people who were indirectly involved in figuring out some of this stuff due to their backgrounds with engineering and energy concerns/calculations (some of which are mentioned in the thanks page of the books). I know, because I've both talked to these people and even corresponded with the author a while back. And I've seen both they and Saxton get some of the worst treatment by fans on a regular basis. (The problem as I see it, beginning with wanting technical files for what many people see as a fantasy epic, rather than pure sci-fi. But, if LFL wants it, the company has to deal with it as is.) Sometimes, figuring out parameters of an engine leads to pretty weird calculations, but that comes with territory, in hobbies or in work. That's what LFL wanted five years ago, and that's what they got. And the worst part is, this actually begins with what the movies and books describe in a given situation, so that's what the technical authors had to work with. I appreciate trying to make different sources come together (which is a daunting task for most of the SW universe), but in this particular case, it seems to be to explain some small numbers, which are apparently mostly relevant for gaming purposes, adding the big events referenced in Cross-Sections books, minimizing, say, the fuel involved, but still wanting the same end results. That just seemed unnecessary in this case. And since it goes through LFL editors, this essentially begins and ends with them. It sometimes feels like they want to have their cake and eat it too, like keeping or reconciling some of the older RPG material with new stuff that's been worked on by people with more technical experience (I'm thinking mostly of older WEG, here, not WOTC) and the two don't mix well. :/ VT-16 14:55, 9 January 2007 (UTC)


 * I concur, VT-16, some posts have been antagonistic. However, I'm sorry, but to say that another author "is the source of the problem" - a "problem" which didn't exist in the first place - seems equally disrespectful to me (I have yet to see Dr. Saxton describing other Star Wars authors in the same way). It seems to me as if Curtis Saxton is fair game, for fans and authors alike. Mr. Sarli's explanation is moot as there's a) nothing at all to explain, b) it opens up a host of other problems which also needs explaining (a famous razor applies) c) some of the assumptions (such as that physics doesn't apply) are taken out of thin air and d) Mr. Sarli seems to have misunderstood the reasoning behind the concepts as well as being unaware of concepts established in the canon. All of this is quite human. Northerner 18:24, 9 January 2007 (UTC)
 * Can we stop saying the author is the source of the problem and, instead, start working toward a solution? Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 21:22, 9 January 2007 (UTC)
 * What problem is that? The original source for this is, by the author's own statement, because they felt that certain numbers were too high.  The problem is that their feeling on this is because they are either ignorant of existing canon that served as the source for those high numbers, or that they want to see that go away as well.  That's not really something we can correct.  If the problem is the idea that the numbers for the Venator don't work, that's false and I can provide mathmatical proof showing otherwise.  There is no problem with the total mass of the ship, or its operating time. So what problem whould we be looking to correct? --Daniel-K
 * Honestly, I think you should leave this topic before jSarek decides to ban you. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 22:13, 9 January 2007 (UTC)
 * Thank you for your concern. But I'm using the civil tone He admonished me to use - my use of the term ignorant was in the literal sense that he was simply not aware of it, not as an insult.  Now what do you think the problem is that we should be looking to correct?  --Daniel-K
 * The best would be to just publish the calculations right here, and try to explain them. Just getting to the point would be more constructive right now. :) VT-16 22:43, 9 January 2007 (UTC)
 * Agreed. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 23:12, 9 January 2007 (UTC)

Can we stop saying the author is the source of the problem and, instead, start working toward a solution? Those were Mr. Sarli's words about Dr. Saxton, I've never said anything to that effect. Northerner 05:35, 10 January 2007 (UTC)

Venator fanon calculations
Breaking this apart due to it getting long, I'm unsure as to how well this will retain the coding once I hit display, so apologies if it looks odd. I'm deliberately empahsising the fanon part - this should not appear in the actual entry.

The Work

Fuel consumed (kg/s) =         4.0*10^7

Peak Power (watts) =           3.6*10^24

Exhaust Velocity (%c) =        99%

Exhaust Velocity (m/s) =       2.97*10^7

Ejecta rest mass (kg) =        4.56*10^7

Relativistic force (kgm/s^2) = 9.6*10^16

Acceleration (Gs) =            3,000

Acceleration (m/s^2) =         29400

Ship Total Mass (kg) =         4.7*10^11

Cruising Speed (%c) =          80%

Cruising Speed (m/s) =         2.4*10^8

Delta V (m/s) =                4.8*10^8

Mass Ratio =                   5.03

NonEjecta Mass (kg) =          3.92*10^11

Length (m) =                   1,137

Width (m) =                    548

Draft (m) =                    268

Volume (m^3) =                 5.01*10^7

Solidity (%) =                 10%

Density (kg/m^3) =             7874

Dry Mass (kg) =                3.94*10^10

Reactant Mass (kg) =           3.53*10^11

Reactant Mass Energy (j) =     3.18*10^28

Peak Power (s) =               8,830

Effective Full Power Hours (EFPH) = 2.45

Maximum Acceleration time on full load (hr) = 5.09

Formulas and Assumptions

e=mc^2

KEr=MrC^2-MoC^2

Lorentz factor = 1/sqrt(1-(v^2/c^2))

Ejecta rest mass (kg) = Mo

F=Mr*v

F=Ms*a

Ms = (Mr*v)/a

Vd/Ve=ln(MR)

MR is Mass ratio, or Mass(fuel)/Mass(ship)

Non-Ejecta Mass = Total Mass - (Total mass/(MR+1))

Volume of a pyramid = (W*D)*L*0.3

Assumed steel construction, 10% structure

Reactant Mass = NonEjecta Mass - Dry Mass

Acceleration time (s) = (C/a)*ln(1+MR)

where a is acceleration in (m/s)^2

Now there are a few problems with canon and this -


 * I went with a mass ratio of 5 because that is, as near as I can tell, what Dr. Saxton uses. It should be closer to 2.24 based off the statements on the Mandel drawings, but those are of dubious standing. So I support 5 until we find out their actual peak cruising velocity. For those who are curious, in reality, the maximum for a single stage engine is 20 before the stress the engine will put on its own spaceframe will destroy it.


 * The rescue scene in Shield of Lies implies the strucutral density to be about 388 kg/m^3, far lower then what I used here, which would increase operating time.


 * The formula for the volume of the ship is only accurate to an order of magnitude - obciously if one wanted to invest the time they could measure a 3d model in lightweave or dunk one of the new Starship Battles minis in a graduated cylinder and scale up. However, since the actual volume, and thus actual mass, would be lower, this increases the peak operating time.

It should be noted that varying the exhaust velocity will vary the lenght of time one can operate at peak power - lowering it to 90% the speed of light will increase the EFPH of the ship to 3.59 hours, and raise the maximum acceleration time to 5.48 hours. As the velocity of the exhaust stream would reflect the power applied to accelerate it, it could easily be controlled at the captain's disgression to find an optimal configuration between operating requirements, efficiency, and engine wear.

As I note above, that these ships are limited to a scant few hours of peak power operation places few restrictions on their actual operating times, as most of the time they will be idling. This is true even for hyperspace travel. The OT:ICS stated hyperdrives were an energy effect rather then force, so it wouldnt' require continual thrusting. And Shield of Lies makes it clear that once you are in hyperspace you stay there. The ships would only need to expend the energy to leap to hyperspace, once there they could lower reactor power to idle conditions. It would also nneatly match Corran Horn's statements in Rogue Squardon about fuel consumption.

It would also accurately match how combat is depicted in the films. Endor lasted maybe an hour at best and Coruscant is stated in the novel to have only been a few hours. During combat consider their movement - running the engines will be the largest consumption of power and fuel, and so we see them mainly drift around or move at very low accelerations. Grievous and Akbar had to directly order the main guns brought to full power in the middle of combat in the movie novels; clearly it is not standard operating porcedure. Heavy fire is sporadic in comparison to the lighter guns, which use far less power, and it provides yet another excellent reason why missiles and torpedos are still used to augment a ships capabilities - they provide a powerful punch that doesn't consume onboard power.

My, I just noticed how much I like the phrase "It would". -- Daniel-K
 * How long are you going to keep this up? And once again, we are not a forum. Keep this off of Wookieepedia. And everything you're saying isn't canon either. So just stop it. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 23:30, 9 January 2007 (UTC)\
 * Dude, you agreed with VT-16 that I should post these here right above a scant 18 minutes ago. Why are you now criticising my doing so?  Why ask me to post them to settle this, then complain that I am continuing it?  Are there two people using the same computer and one of you forgot to log out?  --Daniel-K
 * You're the one who was being rude to Mr. Sarli. I was hoping VT would decided to do it. That's the only reason I agreed with him. You're turning Wookieepedia into a forum where people can dispute canon and starting being rude to people who make canon. That is not what Wookieepedia is for. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 23:39, 9 January 2007 (UTC)


 * Why on earth would VT post my work? Its mine, so he doesn't have it in the first place.  If you didn't want the discussion to continue, don't ask that it do so.  -- Daniel-K
 * VT has posted calculations in the past and discussed similar topics. And in case you didn't realize it, people can also have the same thing that you do. Those aren't exclusively yours. In any case, we're not a forum, and I take back my "Agreed" post. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 23:59, 9 January 2007 (UTC)
 * Actually, I did want him to post his calculations, sorry for not making that clear. And some of the earlier stuff I've posted have been from the work of others, so I can't take credit for that either (think it was something about CW amount of troops). VT-16 01:24, 10 January 2007 (UTC)
 * Jack, there is no better place for this discussion than here. As long as everyone stays civil, there's no problem. -- Darth Culator  (Talk)(Kills) 02:29, 10 January 2007 (UTC)

You're the one who was being rude to Mr. Sarli. I agree that people shouldn't be rude, but I think that Mr. Sarli was quite rude himself towards another author. Northerner 05:49, 10 January 2007 (UTC)
 * Culator: We're not a forum. This has already gone way out of hand. Northerner: Maybe Mr. Sarli was a bit rude against another author, but that doesn't mean Daniel K can be rude towards Mr. Sarli. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 12:24, 10 January 2007 (UTC)
 * I'd call describing an individual as the problem more than "a bit rude". Moreover there's a big difference between being rude to someone, and saying hang on, that doesn't sound right.  Being grateful to Lucas' employees for their work does not extend to not questioning their statements when they don't seem to jibe with previously established cannon (as with the 5-mile SSD or the 3 million clones), so long as you're polite about it.  The latter was effective what Daniel K was doing.   And the statement "I was hoping VT would decide to do it. That's the only reason I agreed with him" doesn't sound too civil either - the calculations remain the same, regardless of who does them.  MartinMcCann 12:54, 10 January 2007 (UTC)
 * I only said that because of what Daniel K had previously said. VT wouldn't be so rude. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Implogo.jpg|20px]] 20:34, 10 January 2007 (UTC)

For anyone who is interested, I posted a lengthy reply to this topic over on the Wizards of the Coast message boards: http://boards1.wizards.com/showthread.php?p=11217497#post11217497 I apologize for not continuing the discussion here over the last week or two, but I really am very busy with other work. Also, given that the post in question is using my official Wizards of the Coast identity (WizO_the_Hutt), it should dispel any lingering questions about my identity.

Also, I want to emphasize this one more time: I never intended to be rude to Dr. Saxton. When says something that I believe to be in error, I will point it out, but that should never be taken to be an insult against that person. When I said that that Saxton was the "source of the problem," the "problem" in question was an apparent contradiction between sources in continuity (Adventure Journal vs. ICS) -- that "problem" did not exist until Dr. Saxton wrote the text in question, so therefore he is the literal source. This is not even remotely similar to saying that Dr. Saxton IS a problem, and that's the only way I can imagine someone thinking that this was rude or insulting. If anything I said implied otherwise, then I apologize for my lack of clarity.

In any event, as Grand Admiral J. Nebulax pointed out, this is not a message board for debate -- the WotC message boards are, however, so I would be happy to discuss this in that venue. (I have to spend X amount of time on those boards every day, anyway.) Gary M. Sarli (Jedi Counselor) 06:58, 19 January 2007 (UTC)
 * Good to here from you again, Mr. Sarli. Grand Admiral J. Nebulax (Imperial Holovision) [[Image:Imperial Emblem.png|20px]] 12:06, 19 January 2007 (UTC)