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Häufig gestellte Fragen
Wie lange dauert die Lieferung in der Regel?
Star Citizen Schiffe, CCUs, Paints und Items werden normalerweise innerhalb von 20–30 Minuten geliefert.
In seltenen Fällen kann die Lieferung bis zu 12 Stunden dauern – zum Beispiel bei hohem Bestellvolumen, RSI-Gifting-Limits, Account-Status-Problemen oder wenn eine manuelle Prüfung erforderlich ist.
Schiff-Lieferungen überschreiten in der Regel nicht 12 Stunden, außer es gibt besondere Gründe wie RSI-Systemlimits, Account-Einschränkungen oder eine notwendige Kundenverifizierung.
Ist meine Schiff-Bestellung abgesichert?
Ja. Sicherheit und Zuverlässigkeit stehen bei uns an erster Stelle.
Alle Schiffe, die du bei LTI Hangar kaufst, stammen aus unserem eigenen Bestand – ohne externe Verkäufer oder unbekannte Drittanbieter.
Jede Schiff-Bestellung wird mit klaren Liefernachweisen bearbeitet. So kann der Ablauf bei Support-Anfragen überprüft und nachvollzogen werden. Für berechtigte Probleme im Zusammenhang mit der Lieferung bieten wir außerdem einen 6-monatigen After-Sale-Schutz.
Diese Kombination aus eigenem Bestand, nachvollziehbarer Lieferung und After-Sale-Schutz bieten viele Drittanbieter-Marktplätze nicht in dieser Form. Genau deshalb wählen viele Kunden LTI Hangar für sicherere Star Citizen Schiff-Käufe.
Was bedeutet unser 6-monatiger After-Sale-Schutz?Warum bieten viele andere Marktplätze diesen Schutz nicht an?
In dem äußerst seltenen Fall, dass während der Lieferung oder innerhalb von bis zu 6 Monaten nach abgeschlossener Lieferung ein Problem mit einem Item auftritt, prüfen wir den Fall sorgfältig.
Wenn festgestellt wird, dass das Problem durch einen Fehler unsererseits verursacht wurde, bieten wir entweder einen Ersatz oder eine Rückerstattung an.
Damit wir den Fall korrekt prüfen können, kann es erforderlich sein, dass du uns relevante Nachweise zur Verfügung stellst, z. B. Screenshots aus deinem RSI Hangar, Bestelldetails und Einträge aus dem RSI Hangar Log.
Das RSI Hangar Log kann dabei helfen, den Status und die Historie eines Schiffs nachzuvollziehen – zum Beispiel, ob das Item geclaimt, getauscht, gemeltet, übertragen oder nach der Lieferung anderweitig verändert wurde.
Wir prüfen die von dir bereitgestellten Nachweise, um die Ursache des Problems zu bestimmen.
Dieses Maß an Schutz wird von vielen Drittanbieter-Marktplätzen nicht in dieser Form angeboten, da sie häufig mit externen Verkäufern oder gemischten Inventarquellen arbeiten.
Bei LTI Hangar stammen alle Schiffe aus unserem eigenen Bestand, und jede Bestellung verfügt über klare Liefernachweise. Dadurch können wir sichereren und zuverlässigeren Support bieten.
Kann ich nach dem Einlösen von Schiffen, CCUs, Paints oder Items eine Rückerstattung beantragen?
Sobald das RSI-Geschenk eingelöst wurde, sind das Schiff, die CCU, der Paint oder das Item an das empfangende RSI-Konto gebunden. Aufgrund der Einschränkungen des Star Citizen Gifting-Systems kann ein eingelöstes Schiff normalerweise nicht erneut verschenkt, zurückgegeben, rückgängig gemacht oder erneut geliefert werden.
Aus diesem Grund sind bereits eingelöste Items normalerweise nicht für eine Stornierung oder Rückerstattung berechtigt.
Eine Korrektur, ein Ersatz oder eine Rückerstattung kann nur angeboten werden, wenn wir bestätigen, dass das Problem durch uns verursacht wurde – zum Beispiel durch einen falsch gesendeten Artikel, einen Lieferfehler oder ein anderes nachweisbares Lieferproblem auf unserer Seite.
Bitte stelle vor dem Einlösen des RSI-Geschenks sicher, dass du im richtigen RSI-Konto angemeldet bist. Sobald das Geschenk auf dem falschen Konto eingelöst wurde, kann es normalerweise nicht auf ein anderes Konto übertragen werden.
Was passiert, wenn ein falsches Schiff, eine falsche CCU, ein falscher Paint oder ein falsches Item geliefert wurde?
Wenn wir bestätigen, dass aufgrund eines Fehlers unsererseits ein falsches Item geliefert wurde, prüfen wir den Fall und bieten – sofern zutreffend – eine Korrektur, einen Ersatz oder eine Rückerstattung an.
Bitte kontaktiere uns mit deiner Bestellnummer, der beim Checkout verwendeten E-Mail-Adresse und klaren Screenshots aus deinem RSI Hangar.
Warum sehe ich andere Schiffsnamen in meinem RSI Hangar?
Standalone CCU’d Ship
Ein Standalone CCU’d Ship ist ein vollständiges Ship oder Vehicle. Es ist kein Upgrade!
CCU’d bedeutet nur, dass dieses Ship erstellt wurde, indem ein kleineres Ship oder Vehicle auf das Ship upgegradet wurde, das du kaufst.
Bitte beachte außerdem: In der Gift-E-Mail wird möglicherweise nur das Base Ship angezeigt, das für das Upgrade verwendet wurde.
Keine Sorge – das tatsächliche Ship, das du in deinem Hangar siehst, ist das Ship, das du bestellt hast.
Zum Beispiel sieht ein CCU’d Polaris im Hangar auf der RSI-Website so aus:
SO FUNKTIONIERT ES
Schnell, einfach und sicher – erfahre, wie es funktioniert!
MISC Hull C Standalone Ship Gameplay Guide
The MISC Hull C is a heavy freight ship built for Star Citizen players who want serious cargo hauling, long-distance trade routes, and one of the better-known bulk transport platforms in the game. Designed by Musashi Industrial and Starflight Concern, the Hull C is not a small daily hauler or combat ship. It is a dedicated cargo vessel made for players who want to move large volumes of freight between major stations, trade hubs, and secure shipping routes.
Unlike ships such as the C2 Hercules, Caterpillar, or Freelancer MAX, the Hull C is built around an external telescopic spindle system. When expanded, the ship becomes a massive cargo platform capable of carrying thousands of SCU. When collapsed, it becomes more compact and easier to manage while empty. This gives the Hull C a very clear identity: it is a long-haul freight ship for players who want cargo scale, not small-box flexibility.
Build Your Cargo Fleet with the Hull C
The Hull C remains one of the key cargo ships for players building a serious Star Citizen trading fleet. If you are looking to acquire this MISC heavy freighter, you can explore our available options in the Star Citizen Ships and Vehicles Collection.
Hull C Key Specifications
The Hull C combines huge freight capacity with a more manageable size than the larger Hull D and Hull E. Its specifications show why it is valued not as a flexible planet-side cargo ship, but as a dedicated bulk hauler for long-distance station logistics.
| Specification | MISC Hull C | Gameplay Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Manufacturer | Musashi Industrial and Starflight Concern / MISC | A civilian industrial manufacturer known for practical long-range transport and utility ships. |
| Role | Heavy Freight | Built for large-volume cargo hauling, trade routes, and bulk logistics. |
| Status | Flight Ready | Available as a playable ship in the current Star Citizen environment. |
| Crew | 2–4 | Can be operated with a small crew, but benefits from support crew for navigation, defense, scanning, and repairs. |
| Cargo Capacity | 4608 SCU | Large cargo volume for bulk trading and high-value freight routes. |
| Dimensions | Length: 125m / Beam: 60m / Height: 60m | Large freight profile with major docking, loading, and route-planning considerations. |
| SCM Speed | 110 m/s reference value | Reasonable for a large freighter, but not designed for fast reaction or combat maneuvering. |
| Cargo System | External telescopic spindle | Expands for freight operations and collapses when unloaded. |
| Core Gameplay | Station-to-station hauling | Best suited for large trade hubs, cargo services, and secure freight lanes. |
Note: Star Citizen ship specifications and cargo systems may continue to change during development. The Hull C’s official technical overview lists it as a 4608 SCU heavy freighter with 2–4 crew, while RSI’s Ship Matrix also states that current vehicle specifications may change during design and balancing.
What Makes the Hull C Valuable?
The Hull C is valuable because it gives cargo-focused players access to a much larger trading scale than most flyable freight ships. A Taurus, Caterpillar, or C2 can already make good money through cargo, but the Hull C moves into a different category. It is designed for players who want to think like a shipping company rather than a small independent hauler.
Its main appeal is the 4608 SCU cargo capacity. That number gives the Hull C a very different economy profile from standard cargo ships. Instead of running smaller mixed routes, Hull C gameplay is about buying large quantities, choosing safer routes, managing loading points, and accepting the risk of having a huge amount of value exposed in one ship.
The Hull C also has useful long-term value because bulk cargo will remain an important part of Star Citizen’s economy. As trade, hauling contracts, station logistics, crafting, resource supply, and organization operations become deeper, ships like the Hull C should become even more meaningful.
Heavy Freight Gameplay Role
In gameplay, the Hull C performs best as a station-to-station bulk freighter. It is not the best ship for small outposts, ground vehicle transport, bunker support, or planet-side delivery. Its design is focused on large cargo transfers through docking areas and freight services.
This is important because the Hull C is not meant to replace every cargo ship. The C2 is still better for large vehicle transport and planet-side landings. The Caterpillar is better for modular cargo personality and smaller route flexibility. The Hull C is better when the goal is simple: move as much cargo as possible between locations that can support its loading flow.
For players who enjoy high-volume trading, the Hull C can feel rewarding. But it also requires patience. Loading, unloading, route planning, station access, and risk control all matter more than they do with smaller haulers.
Cargo Spindle and Loading Experience
The Hull C’s external cargo spindle is its signature feature. Instead of storing all cargo inside a normal cargo bay, the Hull C carries freight externally on expandable cargo arms. This gives it huge capacity, but also changes how the ship is used.
When the ship is empty, the spindle can be collapsed, giving the Hull C a more manageable shape. When it is loaded, the ship expands into a much larger freight platform. This makes the Hull C feel very different from a normal box hauler. It is closer to a space container ship than a traditional cargo plane.
RSI’s Alpha 3.20 update introduced new cargo functionality to support the newly released Hull C, including a more specialized cargo transfer experience for this ship. In practical product-page language, this means the Hull C should be presented as a ship for serious cargo players who understand that its workflow is more specialized than normal cargo hauling.
Real-Use Notes for Players
From a player’s perspective, the Hull C is powerful but not casual. It is best used when the route is planned before departure, the cargo terminals support the trade, and the player is comfortable with station logistics.
The biggest mistake is treating the Hull C like a bigger C2. It is not that. A C2 can land, carry vehicles, and handle more flexible planet-side gameplay. The Hull C is more specialized. It is for moving bulk freight across space, especially between stations and major logistics points.
This makes the Hull C attractive for players who enjoy economy gameplay and long-haul planning. It may feel slow or awkward for players who want quick missions, flexible landings, or casual cargo runs. But for dedicated traders, it is one of the key cargo ships in the game.
Multi-Crew Gameplay
The Hull C can be managed by a small crew, but it becomes safer and smoother with additional players. Official Q&A explains that extra crew members can support turret operation, navigation, scanning, repairs, or other captain-assigned roles during long-duration transport runs.
A practical Hull C run usually starts before the ship even leaves the station: choosing a supported trade route, checking whether the cargo location can handle Hull C loading, and deciding whether the route is safe enough for a fully loaded run. During the trip, one player can focus on flying and docking, while another watches route risk, cargo value, scanning, or escort coordination. The ship is easy to understand on paper, but a loaded Hull C feels very different from a normal hauler because one mistake can put thousands of SCU at risk.
A practical Hull C crew may include a pilot, co-pilot, cargo manager, scanner operator, turret operator, or engineer. This does not make the Hull C as crew-heavy as a capital warship, but it does mean the ship benefits from teamwork.
For solo players, the Hull C can still be attractive as a cargo career goal. However, because it carries so much value in one run, escort planning and safer routes become more important. A fully loaded Hull C is not just a ship. It is a moving warehouse.
Explore Hull C Upgrade Paths
If you prefer to build toward the Hull C from an existing ship, you can view our Star Citizen Hull C CCU Upgrades and plan a more flexible cargo fleet upgrade path over time.
Hull C vs Other Star Citizen Cargo Ships
The Hull C occupies a very specific position among Star Citizen cargo ships. It carries far more than most current haulers, but it is less flexible than ships with internal cargo bays and vehicle ramps.
| Ship Fleet Option | Primary Core Role | Compared with MISC Hull CC2 Hercules |
|---|---|---|
| C2 Hercules | Heavy Cargo / Vehicle Transport | The C2 is better for planet-side vehicle transport and flexible landing-zone cargo. The Hull C carries far more freight but is more station-logistics focused. |
| Caterpillar | Modular Cargo / Utility | The Caterpillar offers better cargo-bay access and modular personality. The Hull C is stronger for pure bulk freight volume. |
| Hull B | Medium Freight | The Hull B is smaller and more approachable. The Hull C is a major step up for serious cargo players who want larger trade runs. |
| Hull D | Super Heavy Freight | The Hull D offers even larger cargo ambition but is less practical for many players. The Hull C is the more manageable large-scale Hull ship. |
| Merchantman | Mobile Trading Bazaar | The Merchantman focuses on trade identity, onboard marketplace gameplay, and alien luxury. The Hull C is more straightforward as a bulk freight workhorse. |
| Ironclad | Armored Cargo Hauler | The Ironclad is better for armored freight and risky cargo operations. The Hull C is stronger for clean bulk hauling between supported logistics points. |
Hull C vs C2 Hercules
The C2 Hercules is better for flexible cargo hauling, vehicle transport, and planet-side operations. The Hull C carries far more cargo, but it is more specialized around station-to-station freight and supported logistics routes. If you want a practical cargo ship that can land, move vehicles, and handle mixed gameplay, the C2 is easier to use. If you want maximum bulk freight volume, the Hull C has the stronger role.
Hull C vs Caterpillar
The Caterpillar is more hands-on, modular, and flexible for smaller cargo routes. The Hull C is much stronger for pure freight volume but less flexible in where and how it operates. If you want a cargo ship with accessible bays and a more industrial personality, the Caterpillar makes sense. If you want large-scale freight movement between supported locations, the Hull C is the better fit.
Hull C vs Ironclad
The Ironclad is better for armored freight, risky cargo movement, and large internal cargo operations. The Hull C is better for clean bulk hauling where supported station logistics matter more than armor or vehicle access. If your cargo routes involve hostile space or ground-side flexibility, the Ironclad may be more useful. If your goal is high-volume trade between major logistics points, the Hull C has the clearer cargo role.
Hull C Strengths and Limitations
| Strategic Strengths | Operational Limitations |
|---|---|
| 4608 SCU capacity gives the Hull C large cargo potential. | Less flexible than internal cargo ships for planet-side loading and unloading. |
| Flight Ready status makes it more practical than many large concept haulers. | Requires station logistics and proper cargo-service support. |
| External spindle system creates a unique large-scale freight identity. | Large exposed cargo profile can become a major risk in unsafe space. |
| Useful choice for serious trading, bulk transport, and organization logistics. | Not suitable for combat-first players or casual daily missions. |
| More manageable than the Hull D or Hull E while still offering huge volume. | Fully loaded routes require planning, patience, and risk control. |
| Useful long-term as Star Citizen’s economy and hauling systems expand. | Not a vehicle transport ship like the C2 or Ironclad. |
Who Should Buy the Hull C?
The Hull C is best for players who want to build a real cargo career in Star Citizen. It is especially suitable for traders, logistics players, organization supply managers, industrial groups, and players who enjoy large-scale economic gameplay.
It is also a strong option for players who already like cargo ships but feel limited by smaller capacities. If you enjoy the Taurus, Caterpillar, or C2 but want to move into true bulk freight, the Hull C is one of the clearest upgrade paths.
Players who mainly want combat, flexible landing, vehicle transport, or casual daily use may find the Hull C too specialized. But for players who want to move serious volume and operate like a freight company, the Hull C remains one of the key cargo ships in Star Citizen.
Hull C FAQ
Is the Hull C worth buying in Star Citizen?
The Hull C is worth buying if you want a serious heavy freight ship with massive cargo capacity and long-haul trade value. Its main appeal is bulk cargo movement, not combat, vehicle transport, or casual solo missions. If you enjoy cargo trading and want to scale beyond smaller haulers, the Hull C is one of the clearest cargo-focused ships in Star Citizen.
Is the Hull C Flight Ready?
Yes. The Hull C is currently Flight Ready, and RSI’s Alpha 3.20 update introduced new cargo functionality to support the newly released MISC Hull C.
What is the main role of the Hull C?
The Hull C’s main role is heavy freight transport. It is designed to move large volumes of cargo between major locations, especially stations and supported logistics points. It is not a combat ship, exploration ship, or vehicle carrier. Its value comes from cargo scale.
How much cargo can the Hull C carry?
The Hull C has a listed cargo capacity of 4608 SCU in official RSI technical information. This makes it one of the largest practical freight ships available to cargo players.
Can the Hull C be used solo?
The Hull C can be flown by a solo player, but it is better with support crew. Official references list a minimum crew of 2 and maximum crew of 4. Extra crew can help with navigation, scanning, turrets, repairs, and long-haul operations.
Is the Hull C better than the C2 Hercules?
The Hull C is better for pure bulk freight capacity. The C2 Hercules is better for flexible cargo gameplay, vehicle transport, and planet-side operations. If you want maximum cargo volume, choose the Hull C. If you want easier current utility and vehicle hauling, the C2 may be more practical.
Is the Hull C better than the Caterpillar?
The Hull C is better for large-volume cargo hauling, while the Caterpillar is more flexible and easier to use for mixed cargo and modular-style gameplay. The Caterpillar feels more hands-on. The Hull C feels more like a dedicated freight platform.
Is the Hull C good for new cargo players?
The Hull C is not the easiest cargo ship for new players because its value comes from large-volume freight, station logistics, and route planning. New cargo players may find ships like the Taurus, Caterpillar, or C2 easier to understand first. The Hull C is better for players who already enjoy trading and want to move into serious bulk hauling.
Is the Hull C good for combat?
No. The Hull C should not be viewed as a combat ship. It may have defensive options, but its size, exposed cargo, and freight-first design make it a poor choice for direct fighting. In dangerous space, the Hull C is best used with route planning, escorts, or safer trade lanes.
Does the Hull C have good long-term value?
Yes, the Hull C has useful long-term value for cargo players and organizations. Its role is simple, useful, and difficult to replace: move huge amounts of cargo. As Star Citizen’s economy, hauling missions, trade routes, and logistics systems expand, the Hull C should remain one of the key ships for serious freight gameplay.




