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I think that strategy is going to pay off for him big time. Between the dorsal and the bridge it's going to get noisy.Well the OP hasn’t visited this thread (or the site) in 5 months, so…
Thanks, that element from your cross section has always slightly puzzled me but no longer!When I worked out that dorsal, based on the Jefferies cross section and interpreted via the 11-foot model, there was just enough room for two tubes to fit, port and starboard, next to each other. Which is what Jefferies seems to infer on the drawing. Certainly at minimum , he has at least one tube off midline that then joins a midline tube mid dorsal. Or, more than one tube off center that continues off center into the secondary hull, and that never joins up with whatever the thing is that connects the mid dorsal with the upper secondary hull.
It will be interesting to see what he comes up with just because he has to build the damn thing. No hiding there.Treknologists have been trying to rationalize these things for nearly sixty years, so it is unlikely Mr Trek is going to bludgeon any “new” yet acceptable solutions.
While providing a convenient place for the characters to have a conversation about the matter at hand.I think we need to acknowledge that the turbolift is there for the same reason as the transporter- as a dramatic expedient to keep the pace moving.
Thanks for that breakdown, it helps a lot. I have a copy of your "Focus on the 1701" notes from about 10 years ago but it is incomplete. One thing mentioned in those notes which I always found interesting concerns the orientation of the Bridge:“Presumably, the turboshaft runs down one side of the dorsal and the vertical power line down the other; do that I have that right?”
If I recall correctly, I had two turboshafts- one to the port and one to the starboard of the dorsal. Between them was a smallish space that permitted a power conduit enclosed in a square housing. You can see how small it is - about the width of a Burke chair. It isn’t like what we see in TMP, but that was on purpose. The enginery is different. This conduit is bringing deuterium to a fusion rocket, not plasma in a dilithium-lined intermix tube.
Not to get too Trek Tech, or off thread, but one reason for confusion is because I didn’t finish that illustration with callouts and explanatory notes). Green is deuterium, blue is degenerate matter, black is negative energy, and pale orange is antimatter. The ship takes in deuterium via the deflector and nacelles (or is fueled at base with hyperdense degenerate deuterium), converts part of it to anti-deuterium (or is fueled with that too at base), converts the rest to other expendables, etc. It creates its own negative energy via those subspace taps that look kinda like sparkly uniball penises. The negative energy is used to manipulate gravity -everything from life support to inflating the warp bubble.
Thanks for that breakdown, it helps a lot….
The description seems to imply that the Bridge faces forward, with the phaser power line running underneath it centrally and the turbolift off to one side.
The trouble is, I can't see this in the cutaway image as the Bridge appears to be offset (FJ style) and the turbolift is shown in the usual rear "nub" position. Have I missed something?
Again this may be a result of the "Focus on the 1701" document being incomplete, but you can recall any details I'd be very grateful.
In the real world, you show up to relieve the watch 15 minutes early, giving time to pass on any relevant orders from the off-going watchstander to the relief.Stagger the shifts,
I see the 8 foot corridors give enough space for two way foot traffic even during GQs (red alerts) as seen on-screen with shots of crew scrambling during red alerts. We also see more crewmen using the vertical tri-ladders.Also, in principal, travel is down and aft on the port side and up and forward on the starboard side, though in practice, this is lax except during GQs and other such situations where the crew is moving en mass.
You know what made me question the usefulness of a horizontal turboshaft network? Working in a million-square-foot factory building. The place was longer than the Enterprise, and deeper, front to back, than the saucer diameter. I could walk that latter distance in 30 seconds. A lunchtime walk around the perimeter corridor took 10 minutes. Some of the maintenance crew had electric carts to carry stuff, but the rest of us 900 employees walked between offices. The longest it might take you to get from one end of the building to the other is around 5 minutes.
While elevators are absolutely a necessity, I can't see even needing horizontal shafts any more.
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