I was rewatching "The Omega Glory" the other night, and it struck me that the search on the deserted USS Exeter could yield some information about the Enterprise.
At one point, Kirk issues a broadcast throughout the ship, searching for surviving personnel. One of the locations shown is Engineering, the same place that Kirk is making his broadcast from. What's your opinion on this scene? A simple blooper, or definitive proof that TOS-era Starships had more than one Engineering room? (Remember that the Exeter is presented as being pretty much identical to the Enterprise & they reference it having a crew of around 400)
Similarly, a redshirt in the search party reports that "all four" are in the Shuttlebay. Is this definitive proof that four is the normal ship's complement? And if so, how you explain the Galileo shuttlecraft being numbered 7? Were shuttlecrafts given non-sequential registries like the Starships were?
And if you're of the opinion that the Exeter is different from the Enterprise, why do you feel this way?
At one point, Kirk issues a broadcast throughout the ship, searching for surviving personnel. One of the locations shown is Engineering, the same place that Kirk is making his broadcast from. What's your opinion on this scene? A simple blooper, or definitive proof that TOS-era Starships had more than one Engineering room? (Remember that the Exeter is presented as being pretty much identical to the Enterprise & they reference it having a crew of around 400)
Similarly, a redshirt in the search party reports that "all four" are in the Shuttlebay. Is this definitive proof that four is the normal ship's complement? And if so, how you explain the Galileo shuttlecraft being numbered 7? Were shuttlecrafts given non-sequential registries like the Starships were?
And if you're of the opinion that the Exeter is different from the Enterprise, why do you feel this way?