Interesting. What's going on with the pennant lines? There are 2 distinct "steps" on the bottom most picture.
The construction clearly shows effort was made to create a straight row of windows that was above the red banner lines to make the model look nice. The model has sloping alignment of windows in the rear, the Sinclair drawing below has sloping windows in the rear... Some groups of windows were lined up to be straight and horizontal, while other windows, mostly in the rear half, were lined up on the barrel slats. Example for one row of windows shows a taper angle of about 1.9 degrees:The drawings I consider most accurate show no sign of any slant to any row of windows. So I don't think your theory holds up.
On his drawings perhaps, but not on Casimiro's or Kerr's.The construction clearly shows effort was made to create a straight row of windows that was above the red banner lines to make the model look nice. The model has sloping alignment of windows in the rear, the Sinclair drawing below has sloping windows in the rear... Some groups of windows were lined up to be straight and horizontal, while other windows, mostly in the rear half, were lined up on the barrel slats. Example for one row of windows shows a taper angle of about 1.9 degrees:
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Just for fun, I'd just like to see the secondary hull re-proportioned to line up the windows and stretch the hangar area back to look more like the pressure hull diagrams so the Datin Hangar Model fits inside the ship. Alas, I don't have the computer tools.
I tried it using my limited skill. I took the pressure hull diagram, sized it for a 122 foot length from the fantail to the aft of the pylon; sized and superimposed the Sinclair model over the front portion; and lastly, eyeballed the rest. The new clamshell doors are 60' in diameter. The stern got so long, that I shortened it (see below). Rear windows line up, now. Conclusion: Meh (but the hangar sorta fits...)But I'm sure someone will play with your re-proportioning idea.
I see that the window alignment was not part a some force perspective design, rather, it was just easier to cut the windows following the tapering seams in the rear of the ship. In the front they adjusted for it to level out the front set of windows:
Mea culpa. Didn't mean to imply ALL the windows were ON the seams. And the one row of level windows does not validate the point that ALL the windows in the front half of the hull are not tapered, which is the claim I was responding to.Actually, the pictures BK613 posted show the windows kinda follow the seams, but most are not on seams.
And this image proves, if you look carefully, that this major row of windows is NOT on the seam and is NOT parallel to the seam. Only one of the rectangular windows in this image is on the seam.
And it's not like they put the blocks in crooked, because they aren't parallel on the outside either.
I noticed that too: If I were to hazard a guess, the image is a video grab because you can see those "steps" running vertical, passing through seams and a windowInteresting. What's going on with the pennant lines? There are 2 distinct "steps" on the bottom most picture.
I would have kept the original size of the nacelle pylons but otherwise an interesting shape. The profile is reminiscent of FJ's Dreadnought hull. Your version would be a weird shape to model near the stern.I tried it using my limited skill. I took the pressure hull diagram, sized it for a 122 foot length from the fantail to the aft of the pylon; sized and superimposed the Sinclair model over the front portion; and lastly, eyeballed the rest. The new clamshell doors are 60' in diameter. The stern got so long, that I shortened it (see below). Rear windows line up, now. Conclusion: Meh (but the hangar sorta fits...)
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Please take care, BK. You only get one spine in your life. I know; four back operations on the bottom two discs including a fusion last year. Get well, soon.Sorry guys, nursing a back injury so I'm going to be briefer than I would like.
I thought the same thing. Plus, it gives back hangar bay length I removed by moving the doors forward. The rear windows still need to be repositioned forward to locate them on the observation deck, if I continue any further.I would have kept the original size of the nacelle pylons but otherwise an interesting shape.
Me, too, but I just got to move those last two windows...It is interesting, but I prefer the original lines.
Thanks. Just musculature not anything spinal but I'm not been able to sit very long in my computer chair.Please take care, BK. You only get one spine in your life. I know; four back operations on the bottom two discs including a fusion last year. Get well, soon.![]()
This got me thinking (eventually), because it's not the only episode that JML wrote, is it? And if I could backtrack to a couple of topics ago, I found another potential reference to the main M/AM reactor systems being in the secondary hull. From The Changeling:John Meredyth Lucas wrote both "Elaan of Troyius" and and "That Which Survives" and also directed the former, so it's thanks to him that we get these two oddball episodes that disagree with the rest of the series indicating that there is more than one M/A-M reactor aboard.
I have emphasised the relevant text. Nomad opening the antimatter input valve and giving free reign to the energy release is almost exactly what happens in That Which Survives and the ever increasing warp speed is the exact same consequence. Fortunately, this time Nomad can reverse the effect.(Nomad floats into the Engine Room)
SCOTT: Notify the captain. What are you doing here? Watch your panels, everyone. Watch that polymass. Roger, help with the interfactor. Leave that alone.
NOMAD: This primitive matter-antimatter propulsion system is the main drive?
SCOTT: Aye.
NOMAD: Inefficiency exists in THE antimatter input valve. I will effect repair.
(The indicator board to the right of the central ladder goes crazy.)
SCOTT: How are you doing that?
NOMAD: The energy release controls are also most inefficient. I shall effect repair.
ENGINEER: Warp eight, Mister Scott, and increasing.
SCOTT: Throw your dampers.
ENGINEER: Warp nine.
SCOTT: Cut your circuits, all of them.
ENGINEER: Warp 10, Mister Scott.
SCOTT: Impossible. It can't go that fast.
ENGINEER: It just won't stop, Mister Scott. Warp eleven!
I think the takeaway from this find is that The Changeling is from Season 2 and properly vetted through the Roddenberry/Jefferies script review. And if the sequence of events is as I believe, the James Blish versions have some input on this. Blish has Scotty call Kirk when Nomad starts messing with things while the episode has Scotty have an engineering tech call Kirk while he keeps and eye on Nomad. That dialog is not in Blish's adaption of the story. As Blish's adaptions are often of an earlier version of the script and not the shooting verision of the script (showing earlier names and edited scenes), it is possible that the dialog in question came from other writers on staff or Roddenberry himself. In season 3 we really can't be that sure of the process, but in Seasons 1 & 2 we do know that no script was shot without being reworked, often by Roddenberry himself. Now if we have such a early copy of this script, it would be interesting to see if the difference is a Blish edit or a script edit. Without having an early version of the script I think we can assume that this description either passed unchanged through the editing process or was added in the editing process. It is not something that just slipped through in season 3 as previously suggested.@ Mytran; I was aware of the single reactor reference in "The Changeling", but for some reason did not think to check if JML was involved, but, of course, it comes as no surprise that he was. So basically it's the JML engine model vs the GR/MJ model we're dealing with, and whether they could,or should, be reconciled.
Have we ever detailed out the two different engine/power models?@ Mytran; I was aware of the single reactor reference in "The Changeling", but for some reason did not think to check if JML was involved, but, of course, it comes as no surprise that he was. So basically it's the JML engine model vs the GR/MJ model we're dealing with, and whether they could,or should, be reconciled.
Except that even muti-engine aviation style still should have a single fuel input as a plane has to manage the flow of fuel out of the tanks to keep the plane balanced. What we are talking about is the fuel input. It is a two part fuel mixture and the only time the specifics are detailed, it is a single system. And there could be three reactors and one fuel feed system. The only ship we get a crystal clear picture of the entire reaction system is Ent D in TNG and that could be greatly different than 100 years before that. I suggested before that the main reactor could pre-charge the antimatter by mixing in a smaller amount of matter to create an anti-mater plasma the then goes to the warp engines where the reaction completes with the matter stored there (and suddenly the Bussards make a lot of sense, acting like the air intake on an internal cumbustion engine). The first reaction provides the ship power, the other the warp field. So a three reactor system with a single anti-matter fuel input fits all the situations.Have we ever detailed out the two different engine/power models?
JML Model (naval style)
1. One M/AM reactor in secondary (or saucer) hull feeding power to the warp engines in each nacelle.
2. etc.
GR/MJ Model (aviation style)
1. Two M/AM reactors, one in each warp engine nacelle which send power into the secondary hull.
2. etc.
or is that about it? Three or more M/AM reactors? Magic rocks? Anti-matter flow?I love treknobabble.
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