
You get neutronium from pulsars - and not just any pulsars, they have to be relatively new. What you do is send an extremely tough ship on a hyperbolic trajectory past the pulsar, getting as close as you can, skirting the energy jets, and use forcefields to scoop neutronium off the surface. It's crazy-dangerous, hellishly hard on the ship... and immensely, massively profitable. The newer the pulsar is, the more neutronium you can scoop off of it on a given mission - and the whole thing is only really profitable if your pulsar happens to be in the first few centuries of life. So having a nice new pulsar in your territory is extremely good news, especially if you have the tech to extract from it yourself. And the Coalition does have one, and does know how to extract from it. It's one of the things that gives an otherwise upstart mogrel alliance a place on the big table of galactic politics. And makes them both friends and enemies at that table.
The Clogaus are small - they have to be, to withstand the gravity gradient. They're nevertheless expensive, and will only last a few months at the regular rate of one mission a day. By that time they've paid for themselves many times over. A Clogau is essentially a massively thick web of structural beams with a bunch of engines on the back and various forcefield generators studded all over the front. A big pair of neutronium tanks is stuck in the middle, a crew area at the bow. No FTL drive, they are built in the pulsar system and scrapped there when they're done. Assuming they've survived that long, of course, which only about 90% do. Crewing a Clogau for a tour will make you moderately wealthy for life - assuming you don't end in that 10% that don't make it, of course.







