Great work there looking forward to the other views 









I appreciate that suggestion!@Donny One other thing I belatedly noticed: The call-out for the "emergency flush vents" leads to the vents that are in shadow. The corresponding vents on the other pylon are clearly visible so swapping the "vent" call-out with the "pennant" call-out top-to-bottom would make it more readable.
I suppose, yes. In my head canon, however, I see the dish to be a combination sensor array and deflector (Jefferies called it out as a "Main Sensor", whereas Franz Joseph called it out as the "Main Sensor and Navigational Deflector). The "spike", IMO, is what emits the deflector beam, whereas the dish is the receptor for sensing information. With this in mind, having the dish partially covered by the bridge (which also has a sensor dome on top) would only hinder the sensor to a degree that is most likely made up by the bridge's upper sensor dome.Not a comment on your work, Donny, since I'm not that into renders et al. so it all looks pretty amazing. But a question on the general miranda design -- if it's a deflector pod, doesn't the bridge slightly get in the way of the deflector (ship facing forward), and wouldnt that maybe impede its work at deflecting?
I'm really not into the Trek tech side of things either, so pardon my ignorance if I'm off base here.
Ya know, I've been having trouble deciding what those indentions on the aft of the upper hull are exactly. On the TMP Miranda, they're adorned with greebles, but since I wanted this ship to be greeble-less, they're just...well...indents.The indents below the rollbar / support pylons are just begging for a callout...
I suppose, yes. In my head canon, however, I see the dish to be a combination sensor array and deflector (Jefferies called it out as a "Main Sensor", whereas Franz Joseph called it out as the "Main Sensor and Navigational Deflector). The "spike", IMO, is what emits the deflector beam, whereas the dish is the receptor for sensing information. With this in mind, having the dish partially covered by the bridge (which also has a sensor dome on top) would only hinder the sensor to a degree that is most likely made up by the bridge's upper sensor dome.
OR, I have no idea what I'm talking about and I'm making this up as I go![]()
Ya know, I've been having trouble deciding what those indentions on the aft of the upper hull are exactly. On the TMP Miranda, they're adorned with greebles, but since I wanted this ship to be greeble-less, they're just...well...indents.
I was thinking, what if the roll-bar were removed (which I believe it is meant to be when required), those indents would then have the necessary clearance to serve as mounting points for larger mission modules. For example, Ptolemy-style tow plates could be fastened to the ship in these locations, turning the Miranda into a container transport if her mission required it. This resulted in me whipping together the following mock-up:
It does, however, present a small problem in that the containers are therefore mounted upside-down, so their registries and pennant would be upside down as well, which would look odd. I dunno, just a thought. I may call the indents out as "auxiliary mission module attachment points" or something similar.
Alternatively, I thought that maybe the indents within the indents could be large doors that open up directly into the hangar/cargo complex for the placement of large objects to be ferried to another location. This function would also require the rollbar to be removed for said operation. Thoughts?
Ya know, I've been having trouble deciding what those indentions on the aft of the upper hull are exactly. On the TMP Miranda, they're adorned with greebles, but since I wanted this ship to be greeble-less, they're just...well...indents.
I was thinking, what if the roll-bar were removed (which I believe it is meant to be when required), those indents would then have the necessary clearance to serve as mounting points for larger mission modules. For example, Ptolemy-style tow plates could be fastened to the ship in these locations, turning the Miranda into a container transport if her mission required it. This resulted in me whipping together the following mock-up:
It does, however, present a small problem in that the containers are therefore mounted upside-down, so their registries and pennant would be upside down as well, which would look odd. Unless I modify my containers to have mounting points on the top and bottom.
I dunno, just a thought. I may call the indents out as "auxiliary mission module attachment points" or something similar. This functionality would have also seemed to have been removed completely by the time the Miranda's were all refit.
Alternatively, I thought that maybe the indents within the indents could be large doors that open up directly into the hangar/cargo complex for the placement of large objects to be ferried to another location. This function would also require the rollbar to be removed for said operation. Thoughts?
That's BEAUTIFUL! I also love that you actually printed aridas's Fifty for Fifty. I should do that!Check out the mess on the floor around my workstation at home, where I've gathered a ton of Trek schematics to study what others have done in this vein:
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Yeah! I still need to buy a nice binder for them. I love having those as an addendum to my Tech Manual!That's BEAUTIFUL! I also love that you actually printed aridas's Fifty for Fifty. I should do that!
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