It started as a joke but it actually makes some sense! I mean, how much useage does the shuttlebay actually get during an average mission?
And yes, it's certainly a prime location for the oft-debated bowling alley!
Love it - another Trek Mystery solved!I think a wishful nod to the "Enemy Within" when CBS did TOS-R would've been a throwaway scene of the hangar deck converted for some other purpose (and thus no shuttles). The in-universe explanation that Kirk didn't send shuttles to pick up Sulu was because of the SF Annual Bowling Tournament![]()
If the doors were where you suggest, shouldn't we have seen something like this?
Remember, the turntable is also an elevator...
Credit where its due - and the pic ain't mine!BTW - Mytran - neat composite picture!
So two turntables (elevators)?
Two inline elevators (both with turntables) would make operations easier. A flush with the deck hatch, covering the lowered forward elevator, would account for the second elevator not being seen in the episodes. Two adjacent elevators, working together, could lower a longer shuttle down to the shop deck.Timo, are you thinking of two turntables on the flight deck or the below deck hangar?
This could be simular to the blast barriers raised on Navy aircraft carriers before launching a plane.Or alternatively, a wall is raised between the two turntables which would explain the blank wall behind the shuttle in
JTB and TIS.
It would seem to make sense that the shuttles can in some fashion taxi under their own power.But that also adds some complication - how does the shuttle move from one turntable to the other? And how does it fit with what we've seen?
Good point.It's also possible the deck is big simply because it is designed to accept larger auxiliaries on occasion. Say, the gigantic aquashuttle from TAS "Ambergris Element" wouldn't fit aboard at all if the shuttlebay was only sized for economic operation of the Class F craft. And some other auxiliaries or visiting craft may be larger still.
The problem with this is that you're beginning to devote a truly large percentage of the secondary hull to flight operations, something the Enterprise does fairly rarely.Another idea would be having two lifts/garages side by side at the front end of the flight deck, behind rolling doors.
That was the possibility I was promoting - as an alternative to the previous idea of placing all the witnessed "Hanger Deck" action on the deck below the shuttlebay miniature set. After all, that's how aircraft carriers are built, too: there's a large surface, the flight deck, for facilitiating launches and recoveries, but the logistics call for multiple lifts that take the craft to and from that surface.So two turntables (elevators)?
It's indeed quite a mystery why the shuttle takeoff and landing area needs to be that big. But both TOS and especially TOS-R give us hints that shuttlecraft operations aren't particularly precise, and that even a standard launch (as seen in TOS-R "The Galileo Seven") would result in the launching craft badly bruising any other craft housed in the same volume.
It's also possible the deck is big simply because it is designed to accept larger auxiliaries on occasion. Say, the gigantic aquashuttle from TAS "Ambergris Element" wouldn't fit aboard at all if the shuttlebay was only sized for economic operation of the Class F craft. And some other auxiliaries or visiting craft may be larger still.
On the two-lift idea, note how the TMP-refitted ship has elevator surfaces (square, paired, non-rotating) roughly where this putative second turntable would be. Hell, there might be three elevators in TOS already: one central, close to the aft doors, and two farther forward, possibly larger and non-rotating just like in TMP.
Another idea would be having two lifts/garages side by side at the front end of the flight deck, behind rolling doors. The ST5:TFF set suggests this.
In TMP, the garage doors and walls might have been removed, but the actual volume would still be allocated that way. Or the doors and walls might be present even in TMP, but would be moveable, just like some other walls in the secondary hull are shown to be moveable in that movie. Perhaps the differences between TOS, TMP and TFF are actually rather minimal?
Timo Saloniemi
The pic is one of mine I did a couple of years ago. It was part of a very long thread called Never seen TOS scenes.
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