In most of the cases its only 40-50 years. Less time than between TOS and STNG.
RAMA
TOS and TNG are something like 70+ years apart.
In most of the cases its only 40-50 years. Less time than between TOS and STNG.
RAMA
So how about this by way of splitting the difference: change the assumptions about deck height. Dis used 4.15 meters -- that's over 13.5 feet. As already noted, the 15% reduction to a 610-meter ship length fits with 3.5 meter decks (11.5 feet).
So how about this by way of splitting the difference: change the assumptions about deck height. Dis used 4.15 meters -- that's over 13.5 feet. As already noted, the 15% reduction to a 610-meter ship length fits with 3.5 meter decks (11.5 feet).
Decks aren't skinny flat bits of sheet metal; they have some respectable thickness to allow for conduits, grav generator pucks, etc. I've used 13' on center decks on my ship designs, and they come out just fine.Deck centers aren't necessarily going to change ship sizes.
In most of the cases its only 40-50 years. Less time than between TOS and STNG.
RAMA
TOS and TNG are something like 70+ years apart.
When did they say the Constitution ships were delayed for a decade? Did I miss that in the film?
I did a little figuring; see what ya think:
For a 3000' ship:
The saucer width would be 1311'.
The viewscreen would be ~35 feet wide.
The oblong windows in the saucer would be 15.9' x 5.8'.
The portholes in the saucer would be 5.8' in diameter.
The secondary hull docking port would be 15.1' in diameter.
For a 2378' (725 meter) ship:
The saucer width would be 1039'.
The viewscreen would be ~29 feet wide.
The oblong windows in the saucer would be 13.2' x 4.8'.
The portholes in the saucer would be 4.8' in diameter.
The secondary hull docking port would be 12' in diameter.
For a 1597' (487 meters) ship:
The saucer width would be 697'.
The viewscreen would be ~18.5 feet wide.
The oblong windows in the saucer would be 8.5' x 3'.
The portholes in the saucer would be 3' in diameter.
The secondary hull docking port would be 8' in diameter.
For a 987' (301m) ship:
The saucer width would be 431'.
The viewscreen would be ~11.5 feet wide.
The oblong windows in the saucer would be 62" x 23".
The portholes in the saucer would be 23" in diameter.
The secondary hull docking port would be 5' in diameter.
Strangely enough, if one assumes the 301 meter length, the measurements are extremely close to TMP Enterprise.
TMP Enterprise: 304 meters long.
The saucer width would be 465'.
The oblong windows in the saucer would be 57" x 25.5".
The portholes in the saucer would be 25.5" in diameter.
The docking port would be 5.3' in diameter.
The problem with the ship being much more than ~300 meters is that the bridge winds up being massively larger than it is. The viewscreen is about 136 inches (11.3 feet) which corresponds to a 301 meter ship since the viewscreen is really a window on the front of the saucer and it's size is easily compared to the width of the saucer. If the ship were 725 meters as ILM says, then the bridge would need to be sixty or seventy feet wide....it ain't.Even if the shuttlebay is larger than a 300 meter ship can carry, the bridge is the primary set for a Star Trek ship...it has to fit the model.
Personally I've always used a 9.5ft on center deck spacing. 8ft for comfort ceiling height, the remainder 1.5ft for floor/hull thickness & mechanical systems.
Yes, and in all of those cases there have been significant passages of time and improvements in technology.
Sorry, I just don't buy the rationalizations advanced. But then, I don't find the question of how to make this "fit" with previous Trek interesting either: it's simply a new version of the same material, a reboot, and I'm fine with that.
In most of the cases its only 40-50 years. Less time than between TOS and STNG.
Personally I've always used a 9.5ft on center deck spacing. 8ft for comfort ceiling height, the remainder 1.5ft for floor/hull thickness & mechanical systems.
I went with the ~13 foot number partly to address the ceiling heights on the sets on stage. Sometimes you could see the ceilings, sometimes there weren't any ceiling pieces and the walls went up and up and up. Thirteen feet seemed a workable number, and we could then play with the unseen floor thickness, which could conceivably bulk up to Jefferies Tube size.
Rick
www.spacemodelsystems.com
Though I fully understand that working in Hollywood, more often than not engineering practicality is thrown out the window for the sake of a cool looking set & storyline requirements.
Personally I've always used a 9.5ft on center deck spacing. 8ft for comfort ceiling height, the remainder 1.5ft for floor/hull thickness & mechanical systems.
I went with the ~13 foot number partly to address the ceiling heights on the sets on stage. Sometimes you could see the ceilings, sometimes there weren't any ceiling pieces and the walls went up and up and up. Thirteen feet seemed a workable number, and we could then play with the unseen floor thickness, which could conceivably bulk up to Jefferies Tube size.
Rick
www.spacemodelsystems.com
I looked at it from a practical spacecraft engineering standpoint (my industry). You wouldn't always need horizontal Jefferies Tubes crisscrossing between decks (would almost become decks within themselves). They would mainly be in areas where vital systems are being run to/from major junction points in the ship. I would see them mainly being vertical between decks, with an occasional horizontal run.
Though I fully understand that working in Hollywood, more often than not engineering practicality is thrown out the window for the sake of a cool looking set & storyline requirements.
The problem with the ship being much more than ~300 meters is that the bridge winds up being massively larger than it is. The viewscreen is about 136 inches (11.3 feet) which corresponds to a 301 meter ship since the viewscreen is really a window on the front of the saucer and it's size is easily compared to the width of the saucer. If the ship were 725 meters as ILM says, then the bridge would need to be sixty or seventy feet wide....it ain't.Even if the shuttlebay is larger than a 300 meter ship can carry, the bridge is the primary set for a Star Trek ship...it has to fit the model.
It does fit the model. The 725 meter-long model.![]()
In most of the cases its only 40-50 years. Less time than between TOS and STNG.
RAMA
TOS and TNG are something like 70+ years apart.
More like 100.
And no doubt there was only one when they left spacedock!(Now, crew size? That's another matter. I think 1100 is ridiculous (just as I think 800+ was ridiculous for the Kelvin, especially given the size and number of shuttles we actually saw escaping).)
I thought it was pretty clear that the majority of the crew on the Kelvin were tribbles... 500 of them could easily fit inside a shuttle.![]()
Just out of curiosity, what led you to settle on that precise size? Assuming that DiS's deck measurements make sense (and absent better screen shots and more accurate measuring tools, I'm not going to argue... hey, if it convinced Rick Sternbach, it's good enough for me!), your numbers would give a deck height of 2.62 meters/8.59 feet, which is not only pretty small but is an inconveniently non-round figure in either measuring system....But even better, I think, is an overall 33% reduction -- which gives us decks of roughly 2.75 meters, or 9 feet. That certainly seems the best match for the interior shots of corridor size -- and still allows room for conduits, circuitry, and so on behind the curved portions of the walls and above the drop ceiling.
At that deck height, the ship length would be roughly 484 meters, or 1586 feet... in the same range as some of the "smaller" estimates in this thread. It still allows the hangar deck to be 36 feet high (and height is its smallest dimension; it's wider and deeper than that), which IMHO can accommodate the number of shuttles seen on-screen, notwithstanding possible minor scaling errors.
That's still 1.6 times the size of the original ENT, but it's not so humongous as to induce visual cognitive dissonance. And it keeps the portholes, docking bays, and "windshield" at reasonable sizes.
I totally agree with all of you points. The visual cues don't seem to support a 2000ft size ship. The 1500 seems to more in keep with what we saw in screen. I earlier today did an scaling, and came up with 457.5m (1500.86ft), which can still support the sets & their locations that we saw in the movie...
It almost seems very disingenuous by the the producers & FX team to give us visual cues as to the size of the ship, then to come out and say it something entirely different.![]()
Hey, wow, I got a comment answered by Rick Sternbach! Geeky grin.Decks aren't skinny flat bits of sheet metal; they have some respectable thickness to allow for conduits, grav generator pucks, etc. I've used 13' on center decks on my ship designs, and they come out just fine.So how about this by way of splitting the difference: change the assumptions about deck height. Dis used 4.15 meters -- that's over 13.5 feet. As already noted, the 15% reduction to a 610-meter ship length fits with 3.5 meter decks (11.5 feet).Deck centers aren't necessarily going to change ship sizes.
--which seem to be the most plausible sizes available, and I looked for a deck-height conversion factor that gave me decently round numbers in that range, landing within spitting distance at 484.For a 1597' (487 meters) ship:
The saucer width would be 697'.
The viewscreen would be ~18.5 feet wide.
The oblong windows in the saucer would be 8.5' x 3'.
The portholes in the saucer would be 3' in diameter.
The secondary hull docking port would be 8' in diameter.
360. boborci - May 18, 2009
22. Robert Saint John - May 18, 2009————————
QUESTION:
...Can you provide us one definitive answer on the size specifications of the Enterprise and the Kelvin? Length, width, height, tonnage, crew members, ship class, etc.
There have already been 5 conflicting answers. One from Bad Robot, three from ILM and one from the Enteprise Experience site. It would be great to be able to put these questions to rest with a ruling from the Supreme Court. Thanks!
I have no idea.
In most of the cases its only 40-50 years. Less time than between TOS and STNG.
RAMA
TOS and TNG are something like 70+ years apart.
Yes, and in all of those cases there have been significant passages of time and improvements in technology.
Sorry, I just don't buy the rationalizations advanced. But then, I don't find the question of how to make this "fit" with previous Trek interesting either: it's simply a new version of the same material, a reboot, and I'm fine with that.
In most of the cases its only 40-50 years. Less time than between TOS and STNG.
You didn't make a point there. 40-50 years, 100 years... "significant passage of time" either way. I accept that the new ship is much bigger - what I'm not buying are the fanon rationalizations that some folks are satisfying themselves with.![]()
I totally agree with all of you points. The visual cues don't seem to support a 2000ft size ship. The 1500 seems to more in keep with what we saw in screen. I earlier today did an scaling, and came up with 457.5m (1500.86ft), which can still support the sets & their locations that we saw in the movie.
On visual area that seems to somewhat support my estimate (and yours - lawman) is the neck docking port.
One good example: The escape pod looks to have a maximum diameter of 4ft. When it is jettisoned, it appears to give the neck docking port a similar diameter of the TMP port. Which then using that as a baseline the ship appears to be smaller in size.
It almost seems very disingenuous by the the producers & FX team to give us visual cues as to the size of the ship, then to come out and say it something entirely different.![]()
Just out of curiosity, what led you to settle on that precise size? Assuming that DiS's deck measurements make sense (and absent better screen shots and more accurate measuring tools, I'm not going to argue... hey, if it convinced Rick Sternbach, it's good enough for me!), your numbers would give a deck height of 2.62 meters/8.59 feet, which is not only pretty small but is an inconveniently non-round figure in either measuring system.
484! 484! 484!
I am now beyond rational thought, and I'm just going with the length I like best.![]()
484! 484! 484!
I am now beyond rational thought, and I'm just going with the length I like best.![]()
-x! -x!!!
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