The Enterprise was not designed to enter an atmosphere so why the hell would you build it whole on the ground? No, you can build parts on the ground and lift them to orbit for final assembly.
How about one last time, with a few changes. The inter-fin-coolers are tilted back and resized. I think I fixed that random hull countour on the bottom. Finally, exposed turbines as in the trailer, and prototype markings...
The unseen beginnings of the Constitution perhaps?
(At least it's not the Enterprise anymore)
http://i248.photobucket.com/albums/gg178/judexavier/STXINCC-1701Side-Front03FLAT.jpg
Oh, and my little cobbled-together take on the shuttle; as goofy as this looks, I was suprised when the spy pics came out with top-mounted engines too.
Anyway, time to start working on something completely different.
I wonder if the engines are so huge because they are in a protective aerodynamic shell, at least until the rest of the ship is finished? It occurs to me that the engines are probably the most important and perhaps delicate part of the ship, so maybe they want to protect it from damage and to streamline the structure (hence, the fins) until it is hoisted into space.
Actually, I agree with this entirely.I wonder if the engines are so huge because they are in a protective aerodynamic shell, at least until the rest of the ship is finished? It occurs to me that the engines are probably the most important and perhaps delicate part of the ship, so maybe they want to protect it from damage and to streamline the structure (hence, the fins) until it is hoisted into space.
Honestly, I think they were just pushed together and exaggerated in size to make the framing for the teaser look better. I'm sure that that the final version will look like the schematic where the engines were altered to more-or-less their original proportions.
Good storytelling = good movie. Bad storytelling = bad movie.
Good design = HELP to the movie. Bad design = injury to the movie. But design will not make, or break, it. It's ultimately set-dressing, after all...
Which is just a guess until you actually see the movie like the rest of us.The rendering looks pretty accurate to me, which is to say that it looks just as hideous as what we saw in the trailer.
Frankly, I wonder what sort of mindset it takes to say that the bloated monstrosity from the trailer is the same ship as this...
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(Pay no attention to the Firefly class ship trailing along behind; they just took a wrong turn.)
Get over it and stop whining (it gets annoying) - they changed the design.
Exactly. This version replaces the original version for the purpose of future movies (and television shows if any).
How about one last time, with a few changes. The inter-fin-coolers are tilted back and resized. I think I fixed that random hull countour on the bottom. Finally, exposed turbines as in the trailer, and prototype markings...
The unseen beginnings of the Constitution perhaps?
(At least it's not the Enterprise anymore)
http://i248.photobucket.com/albums/gg178/judexavier/STXINCC-1701Side-Front03FLAT.jpg
Oh, and my little cobbled-together take on the shuttle; as goofy as this looks, I was suprised when the spy pics came out with top-mounted engines too.
Anyway, time to start working on something completely different.
...
Oh, and by the way, America didn't break away from Britain, it broke away from Denmark... and George Washington wasn't the first President, it was really Yule Brynner... oh, and the Revolutionary war was fought with F-14 Tomcats, armed with plasma cannon... (etc, etc)
Well, the only thing we know for sure about about the ancient past in the Trek universe is that the English won the hundred years war.
Thats why Frenchmen in Trek speak with an english accent...
(Sorry for getting OT here, but that joke just had to be made)
I just don't like the fact that it SEEMS to be presented to us as "well, this is the Enterprise. Your memory is wrong. Forget what you know. Oh, and by the way, America didn't break away from Britain, it broke away from Denmark... and George Washington wasn't the first President, it was really Yule Brynner... oh, and the Revolutionary war was fought with F-14 Tomcats, armed with plasma cannon... (etc, etc)
I just don't like the fact that it SEEMS to be presented to us as "well, this is the Enterprise. Your memory is wrong. Forget what you know. Oh, and by the way, America didn't break away from Britain, it broke away from Denmark... and George Washington wasn't the first President, it was really Yule Brynner... oh, and the Revolutionary war was fought with F-14 Tomcats, armed with plasma cannon... (etc, etc)
How does that apply to the fact that they're recasting the ship, but not that they're recasting the characters? Shouldn't one change in appearance be just as damning as another?
And furthermore, weren't they accusing us of having lying eyes and faulty memories way back in the sixties, when the pilot and series versions of the ship were used interchangeably throughout the show?
DeMille's 1923 Egypt didn't look all that much like his 1956 Egypt, either. One, after all, was in black-and-white.![]()
DeMille's 1923 Egypt didn't look all that much like his 1956 Egypt, either. One, after all, was in black-and-white.![]()
Funny. I just finished watching the 1956 version on DVD a few moments ago![]()
PixelMagic, can't wait for this! I have no 3D skill to speak of, so I really looking forward to seeing some of the lens effects and view angles, to try to figure out what they are actually doing (especially with those engine rib/nodule things).
Very nice, I like that shuttle. I am currently practicing my 3D modeling skills on the original TOS Enterprise. As soon as I'm done with it, I'll start trying to model yours. I should be done with the TOS version this weekend. Here is where I'm at now...
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I must ask, how did you do this in photoshop? Its really impressive, very clean and straight. Did you hand paint the paneling and other details, cause if so, thats really really nice.
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