Surely detaching the aeroshuttle would not make Voyager less secure or incapable of warp. If that was so it would be a shocking design flaw of exhaust hatch proportions
Could they not just have built an aeroshuttle set instead of the Delta flyerActually, I prefer that they had the Delta Flyer instead of reusing the Runabout sets from DS9. That would have saved some money, sure. But once it was built, they got a LOT of mileage out of the Delta Flyer set. Plus, it fits better with the premise of the show. If we couldn't get a Voyager altered by new technology built onto it during its journey, the next best thing is having a new shuttle or shuttlelike vessel built with stuff gained from the Delta Quadrant, since Borg stuff was added into the design.
But if they could built a new set for the Delta flyer then in theory they could for the aeroshuttle tooNope, they would have reused the runabout set.
The Cousteau's ventral hull was part of the Enterprise hull. I guess the same was true for the Calypso.
The Enterprise-D had a Captain's Yacht. You can see the landing feet and lower impulse engine for landing.
The best explanation I've read is that they didn't wanna risk leaving a huge gap in the hull if they ever lost the aeroshuttle with no replacement available
Vulnerable sections are exposed when part of the outer hull is missing![]()
The ship is equipped with forcefield projectors that allow shuttles to leave the ship without needing to depressurise the shuttlebay, so we can extrapolate the same technology would be in use for the Aeroshuttle without compromising structural integrity or preventing them from going to warp. If the Aeroshuttle was lost then we've seen the Voyager crew are more than adept at building new auxiliary craft quickly and without affecting their resources, so a new one could easily be built to replace it or, failing that, then the opening could be patched with spare sheets of duranium. There is also the chance that once the Aeroshuttle is launched the opening is sealed with a preexisting door that rolls in to fill the gap.Surely detaching the aeroshuttle would not make Voyager less secure or incapable of warp. If that was so it would be a shocking design flaw of exhaust hatch proportions
I'm going to go with the guys who designed the original 6-foot shooting miniature model. The Klingons were part of the Federation in early episodes. There was an episode where a phaser beam fired from a torpedo launcher. Early TNG is weird, and sometimes VFX guys didn't know where a beam should "emit" from and just picked something on the model that looked good.This thing is canonically an emitter of some sort, seen firing in "Encounter at Farpoint". It is not canonically a Captain's Yacht, even if we argue it being two things simultaneously would be acceptable. And the E-D did not canonically have a Captain's Yacht.
Flying around with a big hole in the outer hull only becomes a problem in combat, but then it can be a serious one. Why do shuttlebays have doors?The ship is equipped with forcefield projectors that allow shuttles to leave the ship without needing to depressurise the shuttlebay, so we can extrapolate the same technology would be in use for the Aeroshuttle without compromising structural integrity or preventing them from going to warp. If the Aeroshuttle was lost then we've seen the Voyager crew are more than adept at building new auxiliary craft quickly and without affecting their resources, so a new one could easily be built to replace it or, failing that, then the opening could be patched with spare sheets of duranium. There is also the chance that once the Aeroshuttle is launched the opening is sealed with a preexisting door that rolls in to fill the gap.
That beam was moved to a phaser bank in TNG-R, because it cannot come from the yacht.I'm going to go with the guys who designed the original 6-foot shooting miniature model. The Klingons were part of the Federation in early episodes. There was an episode where a phaser beam fired from a torpedo launcher. Early TNG is weird, and sometimes VFX guys didn't know where a beam should "emit" from and just picked something on the model that looked good.
The Areoshuttle dropping out of Voyager would not compromise Voyager anymore than the Captain's Yacht compromised the Enterprise-E.
Why would a hole be a bigger issue in combat compared to any other time? The starship has shields and a structural integrity field to protect the hull. Why do cargo bays have doors or the ship have airlocks since it has transporters? Why does the ship have viewports when holograms can run 24/7? All of these would be more dangerous structural weak points when you consider how many windows ships of the 24th century have.Flying around with a big hole in the outer hull only becomes a problem in combat, but then it can be a serious one. Why do shuttlebays have doors?![]()
Only 6m smaller, though the Flyer shouldn't be able to fit into the shuttlebay at all given what we see in "Innocence" compared to "Extreme Risk".The flyer was much smaller, meaning less resources and time, and it fit into the shuttlebay, that's why it could be built faster.
We see at most 5m inside the yachts docking port on the E-E (from where the lip of the yacht connects to the saucer itself to the top of the craft) though even from there it doesn't look open to space so a bulkhead may close after the crew and passengers have boarded before it disengages.No sealing was seen on the E.
shields can and do fail, they don't hold forever.Why would a hole be a bigger issue in combat compared to any other time? The starship has shields and a structural integrity field to protect the hull. Why do cargo bays have doors or the ship have airlocks since it has transporters? Why does the ship have viewports when holograms can run 24/7? All of these would be more dangerous structural weak points when you consider how many windows ships of the 24th century have.
have you noticed the wings? it's also as long as a runabout.Only 6m smaller, though the Flyer shouldn't be able to fit into the shuttlebay at all given what we see in "Innocence" compared to "Extreme Risk".
since we didn't see anything close the hole, there's no reason to assume it gets closed.We see at most 5m inside the yachts docking port on the E-E (from where the lip of the yacht connects to the saucer itself to the top of the craft) though even from there it doesn't look open to space so a bulkhead may close after the crew and passengers have boarded before it disengages.
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