Here's one now, hovering lazily above the sea on Akua. I keep hearing these things don't do well on water, but I suppose it's a bit like BttF2 - it's fine as long as you have POWAH. We'll get to some of that power later on in the belly shot.
Side view - there's a couple belly mounted rocket turrets to dissuade would-be kamikazes from suiciding under the belly doors.
Here's the belly shot. Shutter doors top and bottom for easy recovery and deployment of marines. Full line of hover boosters and some massive feet with plenty of hover engines provide a truly impressive amount of lift.
So, now I had a way to get a lot of marines to the front lines very quickly and efficiently, but only if the battle was on the same planet as my shipyard. And who wants to take the time to set up a full shipyard, with appropriate support facilities, on a hostile planet, with potentially limited support? Not me. And not my marines, neither. A carrier was in order. Not knowing any better, I started with an SV that can carry one APC per trip, to be used to transport the APCs from a CV in orbit to the surface. This is the result.
This SV can carry one APC per trip. Or it could. If you could dock HVs to SVs. That may change at some point in the future, or their may be some other, smaller, class of vehicle (ground vehicles, perhaps?), so it will stay in the blueprint folder for now.
It also isn't symmetrical, but I discovered the HV issue before I finished fixing it.
Well - that was an interesting way to spend four hours, but it doesn't get me any closer to getting my APCs onto a hostile planet without building them in situ. Aislynn assured me that I could dock an HV to a CV, though - so after testing what happens when you drop an HV from a huge height in atmo (so far, in creative space, it bounces around a bit and then floats off just fine), I set to work again. This time, I would need a bigger space to work. I spent at least two hours building a planetary shipyard, in the middle of a lake, with full refinery support. It was 49 x 49 square. We'll see a shot of it later. But first, the CV. It's labelled a carrier, but it's really closer to being a Marine Expeditionary Ship - those big Ro/Ros that the Navy uses.
Here she is now. With exterior space for up to four Mk III APCs and interior rack space (and passenger seats) for 120 marines, plus APC crew and ship's crew, with wardrooms at the back for officers (though they have an exterior door so it's a little bit like taking the extra leg room for the exit row), a full med bay, kitchens - the works.
Here's a shot of her down on the planetary shipyard I built on Akua. She really is a beast.
Here she is on the approach to Ningues. They have no idea what's coming.