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First photo of phaser prop...for real this time.

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Okay, this time it really, honestly, is the real phaser prop from the film. Not the toy, not a knockoff...the real deal.

From the RPF, via HobbyTalk:

3227506042_aeb3fa6f75_o.jpg


According to the sources on the RPF who've seen the film, the two-tone finish is more obvious in better light; the blue-gray paint is more of a weathered effect on the upper part of the phaser.

First thoughts: I like it much, much better than the toy. The Playmates version was surprisingly accurate to the overall shape, but this has a much more "serious" look about it. I'm especially glad that the red barrel is anodized alluminum, and the other barrel is either not colored or fits inside a housing in the body so the unit looks more integrated.

I assume the button on the side of the handle works the stun/kill setting, but where's the trigger? Is it the whole front of the handle?
It looks Klingony..
 
I guess for me it just doesn't look "chromey" it looks like stainless steel.

Looks tough and durable. I don't think I'd like it in black.
In black it just looks like any other modern day gun.

Well, I think the point of that in today's logic is that it shouldn't be easily visible.

Then again, the Starfleeters ARE wearing bright red, gold and blue uniforms!
 
I guess in this timeline there either isn't a smaller phaser, or it's an entirely separate unit, not one that mounts onto a base to create the more powerful pistol version. Doesn't seem to be anything on this new one that can be deatched and still operate as a phaser.
 
Re: Fisrt photo of phaser prop...for real this time.

I like it. My favorite phaser is still the smaller, shaver-box phaser one with the pop-up target sight and the trigger on the bottom. But that's more out of fondness for TOS.
Which is cool until you actually try to handle of the damned things. If you raise the sight and try to look at it, there's no good way to look through it and get your finger on the trigger without feeling like you're going to drop the thing.
 
I guess in this timeline there either isn't a smaller phaser, or it's an entirely separate unit, not one that mounts onto a base to create the more powerful pistol version. Doesn't seem to be anything on this new one that can be deatched and still operate as a phaser.

No, but you can detach the nozzle section and use it to make cake decorations! :p
 
Okay, this time it really, honestly, is the real phaser prop from the film. Not the toy, not a knockoff...the real deal.

From the RPF, via HobbyTalk:

3227506042_aeb3fa6f75_o.jpg


According to the sources on the RPF who've seen the film, the two-tone finish is more obvious in better light; the blue-gray paint is more of a weathered effect on the upper part of the phaser.

First thoughts: I like it much, much better than the toy. The Playmates version was surprisingly accurate to the overall shape, but this has a much more "serious" look about it. I'm especially glad that the red barrel is anodized alluminum, and the other barrel is either not colored or fits inside a housing in the body so the unit looks more integrated.

I assume the button on the side of the handle works the stun/kill setting, but where's the trigger? Is it the whole front of the handle?

Yes, this looks definitely much better than the toy-version.

The TUC and the ENT weapons still look better :) but this is a very nice variation of the TOS-design.
 
The handle being the trigger I get, but twirling the nozzle around to go from stun to kill?

I like the rotating feature: it's what Pike had on his laser-phaser-stunners, and what Kirk might have had on his phaser rifle. Overall, this gun could be older and more dependable tech than the weapons that Shatner's Kirk wielded, but no less destructive...

As for the trigger thing, I trust we won't see the hand action close enough to be able to tell whether the long forward part of the handle is a safety mechanism or an actual trigger. We might then decide that one of the other, single-finger buttons is the actual trigger.

Single-handed action? Dunno. The prop loses something if the actor cannot pronouncedly use his other hand to adjust a doohickey!

Timo Saloniemi
 
I have three main complaints about this weapon.

And, by the way, I have less of a problem with changing props, or even uniforms, than I do with the ship. Because you can replace weapons or whatever regularly... much less of an issue than rebuilding a ship. Heck, throughout TNG, how many different phaser variations did we see? And uniform variants?

So, my issues with this phaser prop are:

1) The handle is polished stainless? BAD IDEA. Ya 'ever try to handle something like that with sweaty hands? Phasers'll be dropping all over the place. There's a REASON that real weapon grips are textured and made from insulating materials (wood, plastic, etc). And it's obviously no longer a swappable power-pack, huh?

2) The "swapping barrel" idea is dumb. I see what they were trying to do... give a "visual indication" (to the dumb audience members) that the thing is going from "stun" to "kill"... and also add "artsy visual interest." Maybe they were even trying to pay homage to the "Cage" and "WNMHGB" laser/phaser-rifle designs. But this simply makes no mechanical sense. It's a very likely point-of-failure, a major source of potential misalignment... and imagine if (somehow) the wrong "barrel" actually fires! No, this is BAD DESIGN, done to look cool, not to be practical.

3) Finally... most people look at the TOS phaser and don't realize just how well-thought-through Wah Chang's work on it was. Every bit... including the "trim lines" on the sides... had a real, FUNCTIONAL purpose.

a) Twist the barrel... the emitter tip extends. This allows selection of tight-beam or wide-beam emission.

b) The side-knob up-front was the main setting feature... think of it as a "safety-plus"... turning the thing on/off, or setting it to continuous beam or pulsed-beam mode.

c) The top-aft knob was the mode setting feature... selecting various preset modes (various stun levels, heat, disintegrate, etc).

d) Below that was a heat-rejection device... properly placed so it would be unlikely to come into contact with the skin.

e) Along the sides, under the Ph-1, were lines which are in-line with the emitter barrel. These serve as "iron sights"... hold the weapon at arm's length and you can sight down these to visually target. Nearly as effective as conventional "dot-in-v" iron sights handguns have today... useful for quick "snap-shooting."

f) On top of the Ph-1 body is a pop-up targeting display... with the targeting sensor on the front of the Ph-1 body (the emitter is the little round bit, the targeting sensor is the rectangle above it).

If I were going to redesign the "TOS" phaser, the only thing I'd do would be to remove the "combining" aspect and have the Ph-1 and the Ph-2 be independent, sharing common features.

I'd keep it black... but have it be "gunmetal" black (like modern firearms tend to be).

I'd keep the TOS design almost exactly, but remove the Phaser-1 and just fill in that space. I'd have the top of that area have the targeting pop-up and a little "data-display" for charge level, setting, etc. I might put a "guard" over the emitter barrel. I might add a more "grippy" element to the power-pack/grip (textured rubber panels?). I'd alter the trigger button (that one's a given, I think) to be more ergonomic. I'd have the whole thing be a non-glare, tactically-suitable color... something that can be done on a metallic surface by deposition (say, dark grey anodized aluminum?). But I would NOT change the general shape, or the functionality, at all.
 
I was going to post a long answer to this but one of your points sums it up to me:

d) Below that was a heat-rejection device... properly placed so it would be unlikely to come into contact with the skin.
Who fucking cares? It's a ray gun in a blockbuster movie - it's not real. Are kids going to want to run around with those going "zap zap!" - I think the answer is yes.

No, this is BAD DESIGN, done to look cool

And that's why it's a winner - something went wrong with Trek fandom when they decided that people shouldn't do things because they were cool. I go to the cinema to see cool things not to get a lecture on make-up bullshit. I can look out of the window for realism.
 
This thing couldn't possibly look as impractical as the TOS phasers did - they were charming designs in the sense of being able to look at them and guess "oh, this does this and that does that," which I think is one strong appeal of a lot of TOS design, but a lot of the detail was either poorly thought out or is outdated now.

Like I really want to fiddle with that little battery indicator during a gunfight, yeah. :lol:
 
2) The "swapping barrel" idea is dumb. I see what they were trying to do... give a "visual indication" (to the dumb audience members) that the thing is going from "stun" to "kill"... and also add "artsy visual interest." Maybe they were even trying to pay homage to the "Cage" and "WNMHGB" laser/phaser-rifle designs. But this simply makes no mechanical sense. It's a very likely point-of-failure, a major source of potential misalignment... and imagine if (somehow) the wrong "barrel" actually fires! No, this is BAD DESIGN, done to look cool, not to be practical.

I buy it because I can envision the type of "rays" needed to "stun" and "vaporize" require some physical difference in the emitters, collimators, lenses, etc. What if the "primary rays" need to pass through Crystal Type A and produce Secondary Radiation Type A to yield "stun rays" and be focussed correctly? What if a different crystal, collimator, whatever is needed to yield "vaporize matter" rays? That means some sense to me... at least as much sense as being able to twist a knob to change from "stun human" to "vaporize rock."
 
Re: Fisrt photo of phaser prop...for real this time.

Surely there should be a rubber grip for wet weather conditions etc...
 
Cool! The trigger is probably that button on the handle right below the stowed emitter, the control to switch modes on the top rear quadrant.

I doubt it...I think it's intended to be a one handed operation. The button is used to twirl the nozzle, the handle is the trigger, as was previously mentioned.

I see now, it's a squeeze grip trigger! *enjoys shiver down back* Tentacled crewmembers should have no trouble using it.

I guess in this timeline there either isn't a smaller phaser, or it's an entirely separate unit, not one that mounts onto a base to create the more powerful pistol version. Doesn't seem to be anything on this new one that can be deatched and still operate as a phaser.

It may have a detachable palm phaser. Look at this link provided by Starship Polaris http://www.saucersoverhollywood.com/prop58.JPG See the wheel on top of the palm phaser, it matches a wheel on the new phaser posted by Gep Malakai http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3495/3227506042_aeb3fa6f75_o.jpg

Though not easily distinguishable, nor does it appear to be as comfortable to hold as the original, that wheel is present on both so, while not conclusively proven, a small palm phaser which plugs into the rear main body may be present here.
 
Re: Fisrt photo of phaser prop...for real this time.

I like it. My favorite phaser is still the smaller, shaver-box phaser one with the pop-up target sight and the trigger on the bottom. But that's more out of fondness for TOS.
Which is cool until you actually try to handle of the damned things. If you raise the sight and try to look at it, there's no good way to look through it and get your finger on the trigger without feeling like you're going to drop the thing.

Yeah, you gotta hold the darn thing forward in your palm with your thumb and three digits on the side, and your pointer finger on the trigger. (I just tested this with my AA unit.) Oh, well. It's still my fave.
 
*Long defense of original phaser design*

I've had the Art Asylum TOS phaser for a month, and in that time I've had several occasions of wanting to have a good, long, talk with whatever fictional Starfleet entity it was that greenlit some of the features o nthag thing. The P1 in particular in virtually unusable--if I hold it so I can use the setting dials, I can't use the sight, and if I hold it so I can use the sight, my fingers are mashing all over the setting dials and I can't use them either. And in both cases, pushing the "fire" button on the bottom of the unit is awkward.
 
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