This is about ships. I am going with the designers intent. The studio model, what we see in canon, what they drew or said in the production process, etc. Roddenberry was creator and writer. His goal was drama and sometimes accuracy suffered. And as I stated above, it is canon that the 1701-A is a new ship and Roddenberry suggested it was not. The ship he suggested was seen (at least its bridge and captain) in Star Trek IV. So his suggestion carries no weight because he was not involved in the production at that point and it directly disagrees with a canon source (Scotty's dialog in Star Trek V). So what Roddenberry said goes against canon where what Johnson suggested agrees with canon. There are a couple of other sources for what the ship might have been originally called, but they fall much further down the rungs of the ladder from production sources. At least Johnson made a good effort. But Mr. Scott's uses the same inaccurate David Kimble exterior (based on Richard Taylor's preliminary drawings) and the cross section does not line up with the studio model exterior or some things seen in later films.
And I am not a know-it-all, but this is a description of my project (laying out the interior of the TOS Enterprise) and so in this thread I get to speak with great authority for what MY process is in determining how to rank the importance of sources. My goal is not to create an interior that is 100% accurate to the what we see in TOS, but is accurate to the intent of the production. The Making of Star Trek is full of intent including the deck layout of the Enterprise. Franz Joseph used that for his general plans and his plans were very much the basis for Probert and Kimble's internal layout for TMP. If you don't like how I am conducting my project, you can start your own and use whatever sources you see fit. Before the Okuda's got involved, Star Trek was notorious for its inconsistencies in terms of technobabble and timeline. The writers had nothing to go on for most of this and were making it up and the staff writers corrected some errors, but their focus was on making episodic TV drama and so their focus was not always on technical consistency. In sifting through what we are given as canon, I have chosen what I find to be the most consistent. You may chose other things on any project you are working on.
I am more than willing to listen if you have some constructive comments, but trying to tell me what sources I have to go by because that is what you would do is rather rude. I have been clear that what I am writing about is what I am using for MY project. There is plenty of room for discussion about why other things might be useful, but if you expect me to change my project because you don't agree, you are being very childish. Other projects exist and they have taken other avenues that I don't agree with and I don't go in and tell them they are know-it-alls. I go in and make suggestions in case they are helpful or in case anyone reading is looking for other ideas. What I have written are the parameters for my project. Instead of whining that I am not listening to you and changing my project, why don't you actually suggest what you would do. Try filtering through this huge body of canon and supporting sources to figure out what system you would chose. It is not easy. There is an engine room thread here that went through all the variations in the TOS engine room with various people making suggestions as to what the design should be, including having multiple engine rooms. I think one person settled on 4 or 5 engine rooms. It was a great thread because we were all throwing out our theories and discussing them. I learned a lot and my take on the engine room in my design is based very much on those discussions as well as my own research since.
If you don't like how I am doing things, stop complaining about me and do it yourself. I'm not the only one working on the TOS interior layout. There is room for many ideas and several other project exist. Each one has picked parameters to start with like I have. Each one has been open to discussion on things that they have not settled on. But once you start a project with certain parameters, it is difficult to change them. I have plenty of room for other ideas in my drawings. I am just explaining the system I envisioned when I drew it. I don't intend to label my drawings excessively (and perhaps not at all) so anyone looking at them is free to reinterpret them as they like.
I have great respect for Matt Jefferes, Franz Joseph Schnaubelt, Richard Taylor, Andrew Probert, Rick Sternbach, Doug Drexler, and John Eaves. I think more attention needs to be paid to their intention in their designs. A few of Jefferies intentions I've had to ignore because they didn't agree with the production notes in TMOST or where they went with the refit, but I have tried to follow his intentions within those parameters. His cross section has been key for my decisions. So that is the lens I look at everything through. If you'd rather take another approach, that is great, but that is not what I am interested in or what I am working on. My Excelsior topic recently went down a rabbit hole on the Miranda class. I found it very interesting. I didn't agree with some of the opinions, but an interesting fact is that agreement is not always necessary. So in the end, you can look at Matt Jefferies cross section, Franz Joseph Schnaubelt's general plans, Doug Drexler's cross section, David Shaw's cross section and layout, and my cross section and they don't have to agree. Different approaches yield different results and there is room for them all. Personally I like David Shaw's the best, but they don't agree with TMP and that agreement with a large portion of the interior layout unchanged is a major factor for me. So rather than make someone else conform to my ideas, I have made my own project.
I have taken the time to lay out the basic decks with turbo shafts. I have spent a lot of time researching sets and drawing the floor plans of the sets. I have studied the few episodes where the ceiling was shown. I have interpreted the sets through the lens of the day and my knowledge of how movie and TV series productions worked. So I have no problem cutting off the sets at 8.25 feet for a ceiling that never existed. The only time we really see a ceiling is in The Day of the Dove and that can easily be in the secondary hull where the decks are taller (per the windows on the 11 foot model) and a 9 foot ceiling would make sense. I've been studying the TOS and TMP Enterprises for 40 years. I've been studying this site and others for many years as well. I do have very specific opinions and I am not telling people working on their own projects that they are doing it wrong. There is room for many opinions. I started this thread to share my project and my research and my methods of arriving at my results. That is not unusual on this site. The threads on Donny's fabulous work on CG interiors is all about his work. I suggest you try joining the conversation and contribute. I have not problem with you using this thread to post what you would do or what sources you would like to see. Just don't expect me to agree or use them. I am old and set in my ways and the only thing I have left to do is draw a few set cross sections and some random equipment to throw in my cross section. I recently finished my Excelsior cross section and my TOS, Phase II, and TMP cross sections will look similar.