If Matt Jefferies had taken the "Hornblower in Space" idea literally, the aft end of the Enterprise would have had a rudder.The TOS StarShip design team was being a bit too literal then?
If Matt Jefferies had taken the "Hornblower in Space" idea literally, the aft end of the Enterprise would have had a rudder.The TOS StarShip design team was being a bit too literal then?
Now, I always thought the deep undercut for Excelsior might have a craft docked--something underslung that could detach and make a landing.
Which manuals? I don't recall seeing that.It's called an "effeciency undercut" in the tech manuals, apparently to help the re-pinching of the field behind the midpoint. Some kind of narrowing of the hull to not stick out of the shrinking half of the warp field.
The Romulans are working is a different system entirely so theirs could unfortunately be "inside" the ship, thus the huge space in the Warbird's center, refined to much thinner gaps in later ships.
I've seen an image of the fan designed USS Metaluna. A radiator system is mounted in the undercut space. Then when technology advanced and the Metaluna was refit the radiator system was removed leaving behind the undercut.
That would make sense of one generation of ships but not for continued use of the undercut centuries later. Unless the "modern" thermal control systems require the undercut shape. and are placed in the same spot on most ships.
Doesn't explain the outliers though.
I would've used the Excelsior's loooong "undercut" with the top as a very long and large Shuttle Bay and the bottom as a very long Cargo Bay.I don't see it so much as an undercut, as the "addition" of the shuttle/landing bay at the end of the hull, and then streamlining the hull around it.
Related ship designs probably evolve in this regard. The Excelsior has a looooong "undercut," with the upper bay waaay back of the rest of the hull; the newer Ambassador, probably closely related to the Excelsior, has more space filled in in front of the upper bay, and thus a smaller "undercut."
I would've used the Excelsior's loooong "undercut" with the top as a very long and large Shuttle Bay and the bottom as a very long Cargo Bay.
Imagine how much potential a updated / modified Excelsior Class could be as a modified Armed Cargo Vessel.
I've designated the spine feature above the impulse engines on the top of the saucer as the ship's impulse rudder and ship's keel. The entire spine itself can be an elongated gravity emitter, or a series of smaller emitters along its length, primarily used for maneuvering the ship in a straight line, or up, down, side-to-side, plus rotate and pivot in any direction (e.g. Pitch, Roll and Yaw).If Matt Jefferies had taken the "Hornblower in Space" idea literally, the aft end of the Enterprise would have had a rudder.
It could simply be part of the "template" of a secondary hull. A LOT of Fed ships have a basic design of a saucer that connects to a secondary hull that connects to two nacelles. Just like how most of our aircraft today is two wings coming off of a central cylinder with a rear fin to balance it all out. There's other ways of doing it, but that's what we have used for decades, it works, we likely won't change it soon. But still, we have other styles and types of craft as well (such as the Stealth F-117, which uses more of a triangular wedge design).
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