Omega Group Wiki
Register
Advertisement
This article discusses the two Viper-class fighters seen in the Colonial Fleet. Detailed information for each fighter can also be found in Viper Mark II and Viper Mark VII.

The Viper is the Colonial Fleet's primary space superiority fighter / attack craft.

Bsg-viper-1

The Mark II Viper.

BSG-Mark-VII

The advanced Mark VII Viper.

The Viper was originally introduced into Colonial service shortly before the outbreak of the Cylon War. After the war, newer models, such as the Mark VII, replaced the Mark II.

The Mark II served with distinction throughout the Cylon War, but was subsequently superseded by newer models. At the time of the renewed Cylon attack on the Twelve Colonies, the Mark VII was the front-line variant of the Viper design.

Atmospheric Operations[]

The Viper is designed for atmospheric as well as space-based operations. However, Vipers consume more fuel during atmospheric operations than in the vacuum of space. Once in an atmosphere, the engines must run continuously to maintain sufficient airflow over the wing lifting surfaces. Depending on the composition of the atmosphere itself, this can place severe strain on the Viper's engines. In addition to excessive fuel consumption in atmospheric flight, the very high wing loading (a very small wing area relative to their weight) may compromise the Viper's overall atmospheric manoeuvrability. Because of the smaller wings (which generate less lift) higher speeds may be needed just to stay in the air. It is probable that the fighter's reaction control thrusters may offset one or both of these problems.

Life Support[]

Viper cockpits are pressurised and heated, but they are flown with the pilot wearing a flight suit that provides full life support should ejection be required. A life support backpack is built into the pilot's seat itself. During an ejection, the back of the seat separates automatically, effectively becoming a backpack for the pilot using the seat's harnesses as straps.

Should ejection take place within an atmosphere, the life support backpack also incorporates a parachute.

Life support systems do not include artificial gravity, inertial dampeners, or the like, so pilots are actually exposed to the effects of acceleration. To prepare for the strains this causes on the body, battlestars have a specialized Weight Room.

See Also[]

  • Viper Mark II: Detailed information on the older Mark II fighter.
  • Viper Mark VII: Detailed information on the newer Mark VII fighter.
Advertisement