Not in-universe there isn't.There is a difference between scaling finished parts and maintaining a consistent architecture.
Not in-universe there isn't.There is a difference between scaling finished parts and maintaining a consistent architecture.
Not in-universe there isn't.
If a warp nacelle works at shuttle size and starship size, it'll work at any size they choose to make it.Only if you invoke fictional physics like the subspace compression anomaly from “One Little Ship”.
If a warp nacelle works at shuttle size and starship size, it'll work at any size they choose to make it.
And who says the Raging Queen's nacelles are 100% identical internally to the Constitution's? Only that they look the same, but are bigger.It’s not the exact same nacelle down to the exact same warp coils, only reduced in scale.
And who says the Raging Queen's nacelles are 100% identical internally to the Constitution's? Only that they look the same, but are bigger.
While getting annoyed at "ridiculous" upscaled nacelles, a reminder of how the 1701 and 1701-D's shuttlecraft have identical nacelles to their motherships at about 1/1000 the size. Of course you can make bigger Connie nacelles to match an Excelsior hull if you can do that.
Shuttles are warp capable though, and have been since the Discovery-era. "The Menagerie" had the Enterprise at warp being pursued by shuttle, and TNG technical manuals give warp 2-point-something as the top speed for their shuttles. Voyager's shuttle went at warp 10. No idea where they kept the warp cores, though....While I see your point, I also think there’s a difference between a shuttlecraft having faux nacelles to mimic its mothership for aesthetic reasons (remember that the shuttles weren’t warp capable) and a TMP Constitution-type nacelle that’s twice as long as a Constitution class ship itself. That would imply that there was a TMP-era ship that was three or four times as large as the TMP Enterprise, which defeats the purpose of the awe that the Enterprise crew had in STIII that the Excelsior was so large to them.
I've always had a secret obsession with the Centaur, but its mismatched scale parts always threw me for a loop.
The original Buckner configuration had a Miranda-sized bridge on an Excelsior primary hull possessing big windows that were in scale with that bridge. The additional use of that big Miranda-scale photon pod underneath added to that headache. This makes it super tiny, maybe less than half of the internal volume of a Miranda.
Later iterations, I think originally started by the Star Trek Fact Files, later perpetuated by Eaglemoss' Official starships collection (which were really a lot of the same people from STFF), gave the Centaur an Excelsior-scale bridge, making it a little more believable in-universe and fully solidifying the larger scale into the Excelsior generation of ships.
Scale issues aside, I always loved the design. Turning the Reliant rollbar into warp engine pylon "wings" was, IMO, a stroke of genius, and made for one of the more (relatively) well-rounded designs in the DS9 kitbash Frankenfleet. Simple but effective and quite bad-ass looking from various angles. I do wish we had seen more of them flying around out there.![]()
I'm not convinced. This was 1988, remember. Most people had small 13-inch standard-def TVs. Probably the vast majority of them were even BW. I'm sure that shot would have worked fine. It's not like they had an issue with matte paintings, the way they constantly reused that Angel One city.
I tend to agree with Sternbach. When you mix scales you usually come up with nonsense. The Centaur is a rare example of when it actually works because the roll bar and bridge don't carry the scale weight that the Excelsior parts do. The ideal kitbash uses the identifiable pieces from the same scale. But most of them I've seen are from the hodgepodge of scales that AMT made. They might look good in the background, but you don't want to look too close. They are not intended to be hero ship models. The only ones I feel are absolutely canon are the hero ship models. The rest of the designs are interesting, but not definitive.The DS9 Technical Manual states that the six ships depicted at the back of the book were not actual classes but just parts of other ships cobbled together for wartime. This is absolute nonsense; the most likely reason for this statement was that Rick Sternbach (a co-author of the book) dislikes kitbashes of this nature and presumably wanted to downplay their existence. That's all fine and good, but it doesn't make sense in-universe to have an Excelsior saucer and secondary hull attached to Constitution nacelles that have been upscaled to ridiculous proportions (what other actual class ship would have had those nacelles?), or to have an Excelsior saucer and nacelles downscaled so small that the entire ship is smaller than a Miranda (the Centaur). Sorry, but these ships are from actual classes, not in-universe 1:1 scale kitbashes.
With that said, the Curry and her sister ship the Raging Queen (similar in configuration but just enough differences to warrant it being a separate class), along with the Centaur, all have registries of NCC-4XXXX, which could make them members of the Mediterranean, Istanbul, and Renaissance conjectural classes, as all of those also have 4XXXX registries.
Well, we certainly agree on this. But I solve the whole problem by just ignoring the Kelvinverse entirely. I don't like the Enterprise and the only thing I like about the Kelvin itself is that it has one warp nacelle. Not too keen on the Franklin.I don't think the Kelvinverse ships were originally meant to be as large as they ended up being. As you can probably tell, I'm not a huge fan of upscaling ships to silly proportions (mostly because it was done to save budget money on building a new filming model.)
It might look good in a static image, but not a moving one. You can tell when something isn't moving and it should be.https://i.imgur.com/A9KgxBr.jpeg
Looks pretty good to me (for 1987 on a standard definition 13-inch TV)![]()
There were plenty of times still photos were used for background ships up through the 80s and 90s. I expect there were probably several examples in TNG. Offhand, I can remember it happening many times in TMP and ESB. Not everyone was so obvious as 2001 putting a still shot in extreme close-up.It might look good in a static image, but not a moving one. You can tell when something isn't moving and it should be.
There were plenty of times still photos were used for background ships up through the 80s and 90s. I expect there were probably several examples in TNG. Offhand, I can remember it happening many times in TMP and ESB. Not everyone was so obvious as 2001 putting a still shot in extreme close-up.
The DS9 Technical Manual states that the six ships depicted at the back of the book were not actual classes but just parts of other ships cobbled together for wartime. This is absolute nonsense;
Sorry, but these ships are from actual classes, not in-universe 1:1 scale kitbashes.
And who says the Raging Queen's nacelles are 100% identical internally to the Constitution's?
Those of the Excelsior/Constitution-class starship variant are in fact identical but also not supposed to be seen in a closeup, which makes it possible to interpret them as something along the lines of that architecture, similar to the way a K’vort-class battlecruiser wouldn’t be the Bounty design down to every last greeble scaled up.
The Centaur is a rare example of when it actually works because the roll bar and bridge don't carry the scale weight that the Excelsior parts do.
Shuttles are warp capable though, and have been since the Discovery-era. "The Menagerie" had the Enterprise at warp being pursued by shuttle, and TNG technical manuals give warp 2-point-something as the top speed for their shuttles. Voyager's shuttle went at warp 10. No idea where they kept the warp cores, though....
Though you are essentially correct, Ex Astris Scientia points out that if we start assuming that Starfleet can scale otherwise-identical-looking parts, we would not be able to have a frame of reference to gauge the size of a kitbashed ship. The Galaxy class family, though has to be an exception to that since some of those ships at Wolf 359 intentionally used bigger bridges to suggest they were smaller ships, despite being made from Galaxy-style parts. Maybe that scalability is what makes the Galaxy class family the cutting-edge design of the 2360's?
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