Since it appears most likely that there will be a new director for the next film.
Since when?
Everything we've heard leads us to believe the sequel will be run by the same guys, including Abrams as director.
Since it appears most likely that there will be a new director for the next film.
In fact, we should probably forget meters and feet and just measure everything in "Chris Pines."
I think scaling by the shuttlebay is really the best bet.
I wonder if there is some hesitation from Abrams & Co. on nailing down an actual size, since there's a history within Trek of directors having their own interpretation of the scale of the ship (slight or extreme). Since it appears most likely that there will be a new director for the next film.
I think scaling by the shuttlebay is really the best bet.
Actually, I think scaling by the bridge windows is better. We know that to be a basically deck-high, floor to cieling viewscreen, so if you take the bridge windows to be, say, two meters or so, you have a fixed reference to determine the rest of the ship.
The shuttlebay scene is tricky because of perspective, and also because the size of the shuttles is not entirely known.
I think scaling by the shuttlebay is really the best bet.
Actually, I think scaling by the bridge windows is better. We know that to be a basically deck-high, floor to cieling viewscreen, so if you take the bridge windows to be, say, two meters or so, you have a fixed reference to determine the rest of the ship.
The shuttlebay scene is tricky because of perspective, and also because the size of the shuttles is not entirely known.
I think scaling by the shuttlebay is really the best bet.
Actually, I think scaling by the bridge windows is better. We know that to be a basically deck-high, floor to cieling viewscreen, so if you take the bridge windows to be, say, two meters or so, you have a fixed reference to determine the rest of the ship.
The shuttlebay scene is tricky because of perspective, and also because the size of the shuttles is not entirely known.
You may be right. I thought we had a good idea of the shuttle size, though...
Oy, we really are moving in circles.
Oy, we really are moving in circles.
Only because some people won't accept the best evidence we have: the shuttlebay.
Maybe this will help.
![]()
It's only evidence if nuTrek humans are the same size as classic Trek humans. What if they're much smaller? What if they're hobbits?Oy, we really are moving in circles.
Only because some people won't accept the best evidence we have: the shuttlebay.
Right, but we didn't get that good a luck at the size of the door with respect to the shuttle or the size of the shuttle with respect to the people inside it. We got closeups of the door, closeups of people next to the door, and closeups of people inside the shuttle, but this is insufficient to make an actual judgment of size.We get a good look at the shuttles in the Academy Hangar scene where we can clearly see the size of the door to get into them vs the size of a standard person.
Absurd; at four meters in height you're proposing a shuttlecraft the size of a U-Haul truck. Nothing in the visual suggests it's anywhere NEAR that size, in fact I'd be shocked if its ground clearance--including landing struts made it to a full 3 meters, considering the interior has a head clearance of a handful of centimeters.Based on that, the shuttles are between 3 and 4m tall ground to top of fuselage.
Here we go:
Maybe this will help.
![]()
So, based on Professor Moriarty's calculations it's either:
1) 486.77 meters
2) 648.92 meters
3) 811.38 meters
Of course it doesn't have to be an even number, either. If the hanger doors are, say, 45 feet, then we get 730 meters. And of course, that diagram isn't a perfect representation either.
And of course the various stated sizes are:
1) 600 meters
2) 760 meters
3) 900 meters
I lean towards ~700 meters myself, even if the actual physical details of the ship cosmetically indicate otherwise. I'd prefer smaller, but it's definitely bigger, and I don't think it's totally implausible to interpolate the hows and whys, as these 30 pages have shown.
Now if we had a solid measurement of the shuttles and the viewscreen window, and the resulting sizes didn't mesh, well then our heads would explode.
Right, but we didn't get that good a luck at the size of the door with respect to the shuttle or the size of the shuttle with respect to the people inside it.We get a good look at the shuttles in the Academy Hangar scene where we can clearly see the size of the door to get into them vs the size of a standard person.
We got closeups of the door, closeups of people next to the door, and closeups of people inside the shuttle, but this is insufficient to make an actual judgment of size.
On the other hand we have perfectly good images of people next to the view-screen, and we can tell from the set design and from images of the bridge how big that window is. That's a relatively stable measuring stick, all you have to do is take that window and count the number of them it would take to span the length of the ship.
Absurd; at four meters in height you're proposing a shuttlecraft the size of a U-Haul truck. Nothing in the visual suggests it's anywhere NEAR that size, in fact I'd be shocked if its ground clearance--including landing struts made it to a full 3 meters, considering the interior has a head clearance of a handful of centimeters.Based on that, the shuttles are between 3 and 4m tall ground to top of fuselage.
But again, this is why the shuttles don't work as a reference. Since their size is ambiguous, it's difficult to determine distances and perspective.
Better off taking a known reference that we've seen up close, with known proportions and no perspective issues.
Looks like 24 not counting flight crew. Four rows, six seats.I lean towards a little over 3m myself. It sure as hell isn't the dinky little 7 man shuttle from TOS Prime. It carries at LEAST 15-20 people.
OY! I'm going to need to take an ADVIL!Here we go:
Maybe this will help.
![]()
So, based on Professor Moriarty's calculations it's either:
1) 486.77 meters
2) 648.92 meters
3) 811.38 meters
Of course it doesn't have to be an even number, either. If the hanger doors are, say, 45 feet, then we get 730 meters. And of course, that diagram isn't a perfect representation either.
And of course the various stated sizes are:
1) 600 meters
2) 760 meters
3) 900 meters
I lean towards ~700 meters myself, even if the actual physical details of the ship cosmetically indicate otherwise. I'd prefer smaller, but it's definitely bigger, and I don't think it's totally implausible to interpolate the hows and whys, as these 30 pages have shown.
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