If you're willing to tell, that is
I'm curious to know why your hero ships were named what they are. We seem to have a couple of the "standards"; names like Phoenix, Excalibur, and the like, but we also have Reykjavík, Gibraltar, and some others that escape me at the moment.
In my case, the Challenger Disaster of January 28, 1986 was a moment in time that struck me like few others have, before or since. Naming a ship after the ill-fated space shuttle is my small, perhaps insignificant way of honoring the ship and her crew (my Challenger usually has shuttlepods named for the orbiter crew).
Of course, I have a few other ships and stories. Gorky Park, which features occasionally in Challenger tales, is named for the Russian hard rock band of the late 80s. Vincennes, also a Challenger bit player, is so named because I just dig the name; various naval vessels have borne the name over the years. And the Bunker Hill, whose stores are set in the early years after TUC, is named for the battle in the American Revolutionary War (the battle proper took place at nearby Breed's Hill though.)
Would anyone else like to share?

In my case, the Challenger Disaster of January 28, 1986 was a moment in time that struck me like few others have, before or since. Naming a ship after the ill-fated space shuttle is my small, perhaps insignificant way of honoring the ship and her crew (my Challenger usually has shuttlepods named for the orbiter crew).
Of course, I have a few other ships and stories. Gorky Park, which features occasionally in Challenger tales, is named for the Russian hard rock band of the late 80s. Vincennes, also a Challenger bit player, is so named because I just dig the name; various naval vessels have borne the name over the years. And the Bunker Hill, whose stores are set in the early years after TUC, is named for the battle in the American Revolutionary War (the battle proper took place at nearby Breed's Hill though.)
Would anyone else like to share?