I don’t want to seem too picayune but this one says “NCC-1700”. If we went strictly by the image we’d be left to think USS
Constitution was on security alert.
You're not. Just pointing out that any illustrated version of the Enterprise, even a NCC-1700 (could the Enterprise have started out as NCC-1700?

) can represent the current Enterprise in a display. I just wouldn't use it as a reference for making the current Enterprise in the episode/movie knowing that historically the display illustrations are not current or accurate to the ship from an onscreen accuracy perspective.
I get what you are saying and it is a valid point though I would never count a graphic by even so esteemed a source as Franz Joseph, Lee Cole, or Mike Minor the same as a graphic by rhe guy who designed the ship. If the drawing in “The Enterprise Incident” was good enough for him to represent his design, it’s good enough for me. It’s something else entirely if someone else does it.
You’re right about the shuttlecraft, too, though again we have a Matt Jefferies drawing to go by that has a man standing next to it for scale. So we know how big HE thought it was. In that case however, it was only loosely based on his design- that was really Thomas Kellogg and Gene Winfield’s work. And we have an explicit statement in an episode saying that in some way, the thing can be considered 24’ long.
Right, you're approaching it from a behind-the-scenes/creator-intent angle and I'm looking at it strictly as onscreen evidence. But knowing your approach I can discuss with you and Warped9 using your references.
I pulled out my TMoST copy and for grins remeasured everything using the scale on the page.
p177 - TMoST cross-section Enterprise = 933'
p178 - TMoST Enterprise top view = 960' (the dimension call out does say 947' so that scale bar is suspect)
p180 - Width of flight deck at elevator (outer hull to outer hull) = 73'
p181 - TMoST shuttle on the flight deck = 22'
p182 - TMoST shuttle with ~6'2"person = 21.8' (excluding tailgear)
p184 - TMoST Enterprise with Klingon BC top view. Enterprise = 956'
p185 - TMoST Enterprise with Klingon BC side view. Enterprise = 940'
Since the scale bars were all over the place in the book the only specific value is the 947' dimension from page 178 (I'm not going into the ship specs written in the book as that is another topic on differences between dialogue and book). You could calibrate all of the other illustrations scale bars to get the Enterprise to measure at 947' but the shuttle and flight deck would be tricky as they are independent of the Enterprise illustrations. The flight deck as drawn on p180 is too wide to fit in the space allocated to it by the cross-section on p177 since the engineering hull aft of the pylons start at 71' wide and taper down. You also wouldn't want to use the dialogue to scale the shuttle up to 24' as then the flight deck would be even larger.
But looking at it you could make the Jefferies (TMoST) Enterprise with some judicious removal of illustrations and scale bar corrections. It certainly wouldn't be using all of the behind-the-scenes illustrations though. So more accurately an interpretation of the Jefferies TMoST Enterprise.
In that case however, the only explicit indication we have of size is that scale bar - however you want to read it. 940’ or 947’, it’s all good. But to take us all the way back to the original question then, we have a 24’ shuttle in a 940’-947’ ship. We have one Jefferies drawing of a hangar so distorted its galleries taper, so we know that has been altered for some reason. And we have the Phase II drawing, which just about fits in the blacked out space of the TMoST cross section. It thus seems to me like Jefferies is telling us what he intended if one believes that scale bar.
Yeah approaching it as a behind-the-scenes/creator-intent accuracy you'd have to figure out what source is your reference (apparently Jefferies over FJ, etc) and ignore the onscreen stuff as more often than not it will get in the way (24' dialogue vs 22' drawing).
You may think 7' isn't much but it can mean the difference of something fitting or not fitting in a 3D model if it is modeled with screen accuracy. But if you're making it according to Jefferies' illustration it doesn't matter what was onscreen.
I think in this case, it’s a bit like how we have a four inch, eighteen inch, three foot, and eleven foot model that are all shown in one or two episodes (“Doomsday Machine” and “Trouble With Tribbles”) representing the Enterprise - all of which differ widely in their details. Jefferies obviously meant them all to represent the same ship - as he did that drawing.
In that case you're using behind-the-scenes information instead of onscreen evidence. If strictly going by onscreen evidence the smaller distance ships are not close enough to discern detail that would make them different ships.
The most glaring of production compromises stares us in the face in every single episode: the offset bridge.
The bridge should be facing directly forward, but in that event the turbolift does not line up with what is supposedly the turbolift housing seen on the exterior of the bridge. The turbolift should be directly aft of the command chair, but for dramatic licence it was offset some thirty or so degrees. So now if you line up the turbolift the bridge is offset to the port side.
Over the years people have argued the ship has to be larger than 947ft. to allow the bridge to be oriented directly forward. Others have argued that with highly advanced antigravity and inertial dampener technology the bridge doesn’t really need to face directly forward. And some have even suggested lowering the bridge within the dome just enough to allow for the turbolift to be offset.
Right. In this case you are also applying behind-the-scenes/creator-intent references over onscreen references. And since there are competing sources of behind-the-scenes information it becomes your vision on how you end up making the bridge fit into the Enterprise.
Jefferies evidently intended the bridge to face forward given later for Phase II he opted for two turbolift housings on the back of the bridge dome to keep the bridge facing forward. On the TMP refit they added an entire docking port housing to clean up the look, but retained Jefferies’ two turbolift idea.
And with later movies production kept moving those turbolifts further forward on circle to the point where they could not fit in a 1000' ship unless you lowered the bridge into the deck below or enlarged the Enterprise...
It would be interesting to see if there were any early drawings of the bridge showing the turbolift directly aft before it was decided to construct the bridge with the turbolift offset. And note that in that initial zoom-in shot in “The Cage” it looks like they’re trying to show the bridge facing directly forward and the turbolift obviously doesn't line up with the housing at the back of the bridge dome.
If you watch the whole sequence the bridge interior also floats vertically as well as slides in position. It's almost like it isn't fixed in place. A neat feature of Pike's Enterprise.

With Kirk's Enterprise it looks like the ship was modded to have that dome to be able to extend and lower by half its height into the tear-drop structure below. (This is all from an onscreen perspective

)
Another related error is how often it was apparent the helm/nav console wasn’t properly lined up with the main viewscreen when it’s supposed to be facing directly forward. We turn a blind eye to it, but it’s there.
Or it could mean that the lower bridge can rotate.
