Thank you :-)Great work! Looking awesome.![]()
Thank you :-)Great work! Looking awesome.![]()
I think any ship with such an undercut would have the "ability" - but would it make sense with the design and the way the ship worked? I made this mistake on the original McCaffrey Class ship I built. I rectified it when I recreated it.
But, that's not to say it couldn't be done, but it would have implications :-)
AT 120 meters long it is possible to fit a TMP style bridge module on her, but it looks massive compared with the rest of the ship. I used the established window layout to work out a scale, ignoring the so called "bridge dome" on top which had another two levels of windows. If you factor those windows in, you end up with a massive ship. It's a mess, lol. So this is a compromise.At 120 meters…you’d have to have the bridge be its own captain’s yacht…or the whole saucer slide out and land…the secondary hull just being a tow fish sensor pod.
Here, you have a REAL ship.
Shuttlebay in the back of the saucer? Or maybe a dedicated shuttle designed to back into a rear-saucer docking port and sleep outside..no carport.
This way, the shuttle could mirror the “spine” above the TOS impulse deck that points towards the bridge…
I think I can design something that works with a standard turbolift car :-)TMP, we saw this tiny glass elevator in engineering. That’s what I am thinking here…but inclined, as here:
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/innovation/the-capsule-that-saved-the-chilean-miners-5620851/
That makes sense…if you want an ultra-sensitive pinger…isolating the lower hull as much as possible makes sense.
Your earlier work that has a Refit neck may not have been sensitive enough…so this design was chosen.
An enclosed, tiny little tube would also lend itself to a horror story…as a Ridley-type character would slide down into trouble.
Right when she returns—everything looks safe—wait…wasn’t there a tube inside the far support on the other side of the—augh!
Now even that tube might be a tight fit—though the curve of the refit bridge might fit the rounded saucer slope a tad better.
Thank youI think purely because of how unusual it is/was at the time, the Oberth-class has always had a special place in my heart. I think you're doing excellent work!
I've read various articles that postulate that there are different sized versions, from scout size, medium and large. There are a few schematics dotted around the web that show different examples. One of my fanfic projects is set on a civilian-run uprated Oberth-class, and I'm using the 'Strategic Design' deck charts as reference for the size and interior, with a few personal modifications and changes.
Looking forward to seeing the end result!
Yeah.... I know what you mean. I do like the Oberth, but... How the heck does it work?The Oberth is quite a weird little ship.. I like weird little ships..![]()
Totally agree with you, the pod is not inhabited.You know where I stand, and it is similar to your view, but I’ll say it anyhow - that underslung thing makes no sense as an inhabited area. It has nacelle details. I can only think it was envisioned as some kind of auxiliary to the two little stubby nacelles. The fact you’d have to traverse pylons to get to it nixes inhabited for me. I don’t see it for the weapons pod on Reliant, and I don’t see it for this. That doesn’t mean people can’t get down there- just like the Enterprise nacelles, there are ways to get there. But that’s for servicing, with environmental suits or during total shutdown.
As I say, that’s how it looks… to me.
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