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JSP-II

The Joint Starship Project was an initiative put forward in the 27th century to build a standardized hull which could be easily replicated and fitted with Neilson-Cobarro drives which far exceeded the FTL horizon of other vessels of the time, allowing for exploration of not only the Milky Way galaxy and her satellite dwarfs but also of Andromeda and other more distance places in the cosmos. The original JSP hull served well for over 300 years but was eventually replaced in the 31st century by the JSP-II hull. Constructed from transmodium, a material that could only be manipulated once advanced gravity field technology had been made available, weighs little more than aluminum yet is nearly as dense as neutronium. This means that while the painted markings on a JSP-II may scratch or fade the hull itself is virtually indestructible. It is also molded as a single piece; meaning no hull panels or seams.