Isolde Pattern Bulk Clipper
“The Essene was three kilometres long…and fully seven hundred metres deep at its broadest part. Its nose was a long sleek cone like a cathedral spire made of overlapping gothic curves and barbed with bronze finials and spines. Behind that bladed front, the angular hull thickened into muscular buttresses of rusty-red plating, looped and riveted with ribs of dark steel. Crenellated tower stacks bulged from the dorsal hump. Hundred metre masts stabbed forward from the hull like tusks, and other, shorter masts projected from the flanks and underside, winking with guide lights. The rear portion of the juggernaut splayed into four heat-blackened cones, each of which was large enough to swallow a dozen gun-cutters at once.”
-Eisenhorn, Xenos
Isolde pattern Bulk Clippers represent something of a failed experiment; an attempt to combine the speed of a Clipper with both the greater freight capacity of a bulk Transport and the armour of a warship. The fact that the class was unsuccessful in truly achieving any aspect of this triple purpose has not reduced the affection with which these ships are held by starfarers, a fondness rooted in their extraordinary beauty.
Constructed in the now legendary Larland shipyards (themselves lost to heretical industrial sabotage over three millennia ago) the ships attempted to build upon the success of the earlier Orion-Class Star Clipper. The Orion was a finely balanced thoroughbred, and the Archmagi Shipwrights of Larland hoped to enhance the survivability of the class by overcoming certain calibration shortcomings that had precluded the mounting of additional armour.
Unfortunately, this was never properly achieved. The gradual realisation among the Larland Technomagi of the new Isolde Class’ inability to comply with any aspect of the contractual Carta Confabricor led to a five decade round of buck passing and finger pointing, culminating in a series of disastrous enforced design compromises.
And yet, despite its compromised origin, the Isolde has, in the fullness of time, come to be regarded as one of the most visually arresting vessels within the Imperium. Resembling its parent, the Orion, it is at once heavier yet somehow more organic and lithe. Constructed by the Larlanders from the finest materials (largely with a view to distracting potential purchasers from its shortcomings) it effortlessly catches the starlight, reflecting it across languidly elegant bronzed plating, smoothly dappled stained armourglass and electrum-coated buttresses that make the architectural features of the most magnificent Imperial cathedral seem dull and provincial in comparison.
Dimensions: 3 km long, 0.7km abeam at fins approx
Mass: 8.7 Megatonnes
Crew: 16,000 crew, approx
Accel: 3.6 gravities max sustainable acceleration
Speed:
7
Manoeuvrability:+
15
Detection:
+10
Hull integrity:
38
Armour:
+12
Turret Rating:
1
Space:
38
SP:
25
Weapon capacity:
1 Port, 1 Starboard
Cargo Hauler:
This vessel was designed for transporting goods, and no amount of retrofitting can fully change this. This Hull comes pre-equipped with one Main Cargo Hold Component (See page 203 of the Rogue Trader Core Rulebook). The hull’s Space has already been reduced to account for this, however when the ship is constructed it must be able to provide a total of 2 power to this component.
“
A beauty.”
This vessel draws admiring glances from all those who know about spacecraft. Anyone associated with the vessel is deemed to gain a +5 bonus to fellowship when dealing with the voidborn or anyone with the Pilot (Space Craft) skill.