Just imagine how cool two large single barrels that can swivel to face it's target would lookAgreed. I don't think ILM thought that one through fully when they built it. They probably saw some random greeble detailing on the Reliant model (the megaphasers), thought it looked "kewl" and added them to the Excelsior model, not fully understanding what they were or what their limitations would be with a fixed hard-point placement like that.
I think they did something like that very concept with the Intro Darkness Dreadnought USS Vengeance. It had two spherical weapons pods mounted on either side of the main deflector array. I believe they were also detachable and operated as independent weapons drones to provide multi-vector attack modes while in combat. Sadly, I don't think we saw much of their full abilities in the final cut of the movie.Just imagine how cool two large single barrels that can swivel to face it's target would look.
I think they did something like that very concept with the Intro Darkness Dreadnought USS Vengeance. It had two spherical weapons pods mounted on either side of the main deflector array. I believe they were also detachable and operated as independent weapons drones to provide multi-vector attack modes while in combat. Sadly, I don't think we saw much of their full abilities in the final cut of the movie.
On the model there are greebles, purpose unknown. But they are most like the Reliant mega phasers. And such a weapon could have a very small aiming nozzle recessed in the tip. As I've been drawing these ships (TOS through Excelsior), I've had to picture how technology advances. The phasers in TOS are reset so you don't see them on the hull surface. The TMP phasers are a ball on the surface. The mega-phasers are more like a larger version of the TOS phaser. So it all makes sense in the larger scheme of things.Agreed. I don't think ILM thought that one through fully when they built it. They probably saw some random greeble detailing on the Reliant model (the megaphasers), thought it looked "kewl" and added them to the Excelsior model, not fully understanding what they were or what their limitations would be with a fixed hard-point placement like that.
And regarding the discussion of phaser vs. photon torpedo vs. probe...
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I think the similarities are pretty clear.
I think they did something like that very concept with the Intro Darkness Dreadnought USS Vengeance. It had two spherical weapons pods mounted on either side of the main deflector array. I believe they were also detachable and operated as independent weapons drones to provide multi-vector attack modes while in combat. Sadly, I don't think we saw much of their full abilities in the final cut of the movie.
Agreed. I don't think ILM thought that one through fully when they built it. They probably saw some random greeble detailing on the Reliant model (the megaphasers), thought it looked "kewl" and added them to the Excelsior model, not fully understanding what they were or what their limitations would be with a fixed hard-point placement like that.
The turrets of the normal phasers don't move either. Totally static on the Refit Enterprise, Reliant, and Excelsior.ILM built the Reliant, so they should have known and probably would have. The we assume that, although these turrets don't really move on the model, they could turn to aim, that would resemble the way the turrets worked on the Kelvin. Maybe that is what the designers were thinking about when they designed the Kelvin. I'm not pushing to make the 11th-13th movies canon, but if a design feature fits, it is worth referencing.
The turrets of the normal phasers don't move either. Totally static on the Refit Enterprise, Reliant, and Excelsior.
yes, a limitation of the model, same as with the megaphaser tips and the Excelsior photon torpedo tubes (the TMP Refit and Reliant ones glowed red).Was that just a limitation of the filming model though? I always assumed that they were little swivelly turrets. Though if they were solid state hemispherical emitters that would be an interesting first step on the way to the big phaser emitter strips of the 24th century.
yes, a limitation of the model, same as with the megaphaser tips and the Excelsior photon torpedo tubes (the TMP Refit and Reliant ones glowed red).
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