Toggle menu
Toggle preferences menu
Toggle personal menu
Not logged in
Please sign up or log in to edit the wiki.

View source for Comm-Link:Galactic Guide - Accelerated Mass Design

From the Star Citizen Wiki, the fidelity™ encyclopedia

You do not have permission to edit this page, for the following reasons:

  • The action you have requested is limited to users in one of the groups: Users.
    Sign up or Log in to edit a page.
    The Star Citizen Wiki is made by people like you! Anyone can edit and improve any pages.
  • You do not have permission to edit pages in the Comm-Link namespace.
    You can submit an edit request by commenting on the talk page or contact us through Discord.

You can view and copy the source of this page.

You have switched to source editingClose

You can switch back to visual editing at any time by clicking on this icon.

{{Infobox commlink
|title = Galactic Guide: Accelerated Mass Design
|image = Comm-Link-AMD.jpg
|url = https://robertsspaceindustries.com/comm-link/spectrum-dispatch/14532-Accelerated-Mass-Design
|type = Spectrum Dispatch
|publicationdate = 2015-03-08
|series = Galactic Guide
}}

[[File:Comm-Link-amd-Mustang.jpg|400px|left]]

== Company History ==

Founded at the turn of the century, [[Accelerated Mass Design]] gained renown as a high-end electronics design and tuning companies. AMD has been responsible for dozens of commonplace (but disparate) technological items used in consumer spaceflight, as well as most recently the development of their own starship variant, the [[Mustang Omega]].

In 2899, [[Sander Katt]] and a team of six other engineers left their design positions with [[Ayre Semisonic]] to form a new corporation focused on high-level design. In 2901, the company released its first product: the UE-9300 expansion card. Designed for near-absolute-zero operation, the UE-9300 was an immediate high-end replacement for the aging CarthSys Multidock, piquing the collective interests of both luxury and military spacecraft manufacturers.

For the first dozen years of operation, Katt’s team dedicated their time to streamlining and increasing the efficiency of existing technology. By 2908, a specific bureau had been established for taking in other companies’ standard production technologies and tweaking them past their design limitations. AMD-branded versions of everything from escape hatches to laser cannons became a sought-after accessory for ship owners of means.

In 2920, the conglomerate signed a two-decade development deal with [[Anvil Aerospace]], providing high-level circuitry for a number of military spacecraft in exchange for exclusive branding. While initially considered an unusual deal for a company seeking to position itself as a civilian lifestyle brand, the value behind the agreement quickly became apparent as Anvil began to launch civilian-branded variants of their [[Hornet]] and [[Gladiator]] lines. AMD took in billions in revenue as Anvil ships spread brand awareness and a need for expansion of their technology support chain.

By the late thirties, however, the limitations offered by the Anvil deal had begun to chafe. The demand for F7C Hornets had overshadowed AMD’s capacity to manufacture internal parts, leading Anvil to begin to source outside the company (as allowed by contract). Their brand began to be associated with subpar parts rather than top-of-the-line components, and all projections indicated that their own production could never keep pace with spacecraft demand. Ultimately turning down a massive offer to sign for a third decade, AMD threw caution to the wind once again, serving as a free-agent ship component synthesizer.

== Racing Ahead ==

Seeking to renew their appeal in the youth market (and now free of their exclusive Anvil deal), Accelerated Mass Design teamed with Consolidated Outland in 2940 during the early stages of the Mustang development program. AMD financed a significant, undisclosed portion of [[Silas Koerner|Koerner]]’s spacecraft prototyping, in exchange for exclusive branding rights to create their own dedicated racing variant of the ship.

The corporation embedded a pair of their top designers with Silas Koerner’s Mustang team. [[Bryce Halliday]] and [[Jennifer Aykers]], both hired away from [[MISC]]’s auspicious spacecraft design bureau, sat with the Mustang team through every step of the spacecraft’s design. Engineers involved report that the duo had a significant uncredited role in the creation of the Mustang lineup, although they were only technically observers. Halliday and Aykers spent four years ‘roughing it’ on the frontier, often finding themselves at odds with Koerner’s demanding personality … but the results of their work speaks for itself.

On its own, the Mustang (which Aykers described in a dispatch as looking like a “battle butterfly”) outpaces the [[Roberts Space Industries (manufacturer)|Roberts Space Industries]] [[Aurora]] in over a dozen categories, chief among them speed and maneuverability. The early choice to lock down an exclusive racing version seems to have offered significant recompense: Mustangs are now the de facto choice of young racers, with the [[Mustang Gamma|Gamma]] model alone looking to outsell the [[Origin Jumpworks GmbH|Origin]] [[M50 Interceptor|M50]] in its first quarter on the market.

The most notable feature of the AMD-exclusive spacecraft, dubbed the [[Mustang Omega]], was the addition of a ramped-up fuel intake for faster hydrogen recycling. This allows the Mustang to ‘double down’ on the existing boost system, enhancing its overall straight speed. Some critics have claimed that the standard Mustang racer, the Gamma, is simply a ‘cut down’ version of AMD’s Omega. The truth is that the Gamma and the Omega were developed independently, and the existence of the Gamma in the first place likely owes itself to AMD’s desire to be associated with racing. (It is also worth noting that the materials cost of the enhanced boost system equal almost the entire hull of the Mustang Gamma.)

Templates used on this page:

Return to Comm-Link:Galactic Guide - Accelerated Mass Design.