as in they had them but we never saw them on screen?
could be. i have wondered if the tubes behind the mesh in engeneering was a horizontal coreIf you consider TAS, the Enterprise had an "Engineering Core" which we the see the top lid on several episodes. That kind of sounds like the beginning of the "Warp Core", but it is unknown whether it is a vertical shaft or not.
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To me warp core stuff is later (movies onward) tech.
I've always kind of gone with the idea of M/AM reactors in the front end of the warp nacelles with fuel elements piped in from storage units in the engineering hull. The front nacelle domes are main power generators, instead of bussard collectors, on the exhaust end of the reactors. The blinkys we see are the reactor exhaust and the spinning blades are turbines.
The original intent was that power was made inside the nacelles. This is why the fanfic and fan art from the 70s sometimes hae ships with 3 nacelles (like Franz Joseph's Dreadnaught). The more nacelles, the more power. Trek's founding fathers were WWII veterans and the inspiration came from airplane propellers. The propellers generated the power for the plane. The more propellers, the more power. Big bombers had more propellers because they needed the extra power.
This idea was abandoned in TMP when we are introduced to the vertical and horizontal warp core.
So my head canon revised so that the orange/red polygon shaped area in engineering was the warp core.
In TOS designs, the nacelles are analogous to an aviation setup, where they both generate power and translate that directly into movement. A small amount of that power is tapped for other ship systems.Which then begs the question, TMP-onward, what do the nacelles do? Apart from looking like glorified flame decals?(Okay, the dilithium chamber is now in the warp core unit itself but the nacelles and warp coils therein could still be ramping up voltage, amperage, or whatever else is needed... I wouldn't be walking around in there while they were in use regardless... unless, at each nacelle's entrance, there's an alcove where one could bake a cake or turkey in 0.47 seconds' time... and irradiate it too...)
Their being WWII veterans really brings into the show a ton more than just mechanics extrapolated from a Navy ship into space, but philosophy obviously as well.)
Well there is Day Of The Dove which strongly implies that the Engine Room is in the secondary hull...And in the FJS drawings, the area behind the grille in main engineering was a big open space between the impulse engines.
So far as I'm aware, none of this has been contradicted by any canon source.
Engineers, man your stations. Engine rooms, report. Cycling station, report. This will be an emergency restart of engines.
The term "Warp core" started with TNG, so we can be allowed to assume earlier ships had a different system.
He was the chief engineer, it's his perogative on what terminology to use.Scotty probably didn't like the term.
This schematic was used in 'A Mirror Darkly' so it is canon.I choose to go with this schematic in my headcanon, unless and until it's proven wrong. Horizontal core below the Main Engineering. The ship model has a red rectangle on the hull below shuttlebay, this configuration would make it the core ejection hatch.
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