Also, Team G is composed of four components, Marcius was one of them but he was a zombie char...
Should we locate and shoot what's left of his corpse? Rule #2, you know.
@ PW: What are the chances of Renen being found?
Also, Team G is composed of four components, Marcius was one of them but he was a zombie char...
Depends. I'd say Hephaestus is gonna have a pretty big ship graveyard/debris field around it after this. There's a tracker in your brain, same with everyone else, but a team is still gonna need to actually get out there and find it.
Well, unless the ships are on the WH40k scale, or ideally Death Stars, the debris field would be pretty puny.
As for the tracker...well...if you can keep figuring out the direction and ideally distance even from the spacecraft, it shouldn't be that hard. Just orbital rendezvous, which I sure hope Steve is better at than I am.
...since I'm a brit I'll go with the Last Post rather than taps.
No offense, but that does sound a lot like Taps, if more cheerful. Guess the Pond isn't so big after all.
(Interesting piece of trivia is that the Last Post was not originally associated with military funerals: the last action of the day at british army camps was an inspection of the sentry posts and once the last post was inspected the call was played to signify the end of day, later apparent;y it would also be used to signify the end of a day's fighting and call soldiers back from the battlefield, so with the connotations of the end of the day, going down of the sun. the close of fighting and duty discharged I guess it was a logical step to start using it at funerals as well
I think Taps has a similar history. Don't quote me on that, though.
In my albeit limited experience, anything that gives you manoeuvring capability beyond simple pitch, yaw, and roll control at any decent rate will be powerful enough to make at least 1 or 2 significant changes to your orbit. You just have to use it right, and be patient.
Assuming that it uses reaction control thrusters and not reaction wheels.