But I would add that we have remember that the writing staff intentionally tried to keep deck references vague, especially with presumed one-of-a-kind locations like sickbay and engineering etc, whereas miscellaneous areas that were presumed to be scattered across multiple decks like briefing rooms, rec rooms, and crew quarters were sometimes given specific deck locations.
Yeah, I'm sure that even if the Writers' Guide said something like "Sickbay is located on Deck Five" (which I don't think it did), the wrong deck number could still creep into the episode for any number of reasons. Mistakes happen.
The only thing I'm really convinced of is that the TOS
Enterprise only had
one sickbay, transporter room, and main engineering area. There are just too many instances of the characters referring to these with the definite article "the" instead of saying "transporter room six" like they'd say on TNG. I totally agree that it makes perfect real world sense for the ship to have redundancies like multiple sickbays, cargo transporters, and such, but the show didn't really depict that, IMO. There's an auxiliary control room and maybe an impulse control room IIRC, but a whole other engineering? I don't think so.
"Day of the Dove" is very confusing for several reasons. From a story-wise POV the *A*L*F* entity is making people believe things that aren't true, so how much we can trust what the characters say in regards to the internal layout of the ship is debatable.
Yeah, "Day of the Dove" has unreliable narrators so any dialogue in that episode could be suspect.
Yep. I still remember a former member here who vehemently insisted that Sulu saying Chekov was an only child in "Day of the Dove" somehow meant that Chekov actually
did have a brother Piotr.


I don't remember his justification, but it was nutty.
You have to remember that the entire “enterprise” of translating Jefferies’ TMoST cross section into something more detailed (and reflective of some TOS sets and other seen (and mentioned) TOS and TAS places) took as its starting point that the sets had been built like the hangar deck model - distorted to accommodate the lenses used to film them. I confirmed this when visiting the sets in Ticonderoga. Some of them are ridiculous from a real world perspective. The railing on the bridge is at knee level, and engineering looks like something from a funhouse.
As for engineering as built in Ticonderoga, the dilithium crystal chamber (or whatever you want to call it) in the middle of the floor is vastly oversized compared to what you’d expect. The ladders are undersized and everything on the walls much smaller and flattened. It was truly an odd experience, but fortunately I had Doug Drexler there to explain to me what was going on.
I also went on a tour of the Ticonderoga sets that Doug led back in 2016, and I remember him saying something like engineering was built at a 90% scale. It both saves space and gives the actors more presence. But man, Doug talking about the Matt Jefferies TOS sets is an
education! I'd love to visit again to see what their sets look like now.
Here's my writeup of my visit if you're interested in reading it & seeing my photos. (A few of the photo links are dead, but most are still good.)
Yes, exactly. this has always been my guiding philosophy with this sort of stuff. What we see and hear onscreen in TOS is just an artistic approximation of what the "real" ideal ship would be like, with broad tolerances allowed because nobody on the production ever thought this would be analyzed so thoroughly and in such detail.
I remember TMP production designer Harold Michelson would tell Andy Probert "No one goes into the movies with a slide rule" when Probert would occasionally protest that sets like the refit
Enterprise's rec deck wouldn't physically fit into the saucer.