Seems too big now...
Maybe that wasn't a docking ring. Maybe it was a refueling hatch of some sort. I mean yes, it looks like it in the images, but I don't know. I like it being a smaller ship.
Alas, I'm pretty sure it has to be a docking port. We could choose to ignore it, but it appears identical to the one on the AMT/Ertl decal sheet for the
Enterprise. But hang on, there's an out.
The previous analysis of other fans made two suggestions for a 220m + ship based on the TNG screen cross-sections and the torn-open model of the Vico.
Glad you brought that up. I was staring at my analysis and staring at this:
And something obvious came to mind.
Whoever added the decal to the original
Grissom model during TNG probably also made the
Vico model. That might very well be Mr. Jein. It seems almost like too much of a coincidence that the scale represented by this model and the scale I just backed into match up.
So it seems the modelling department believed in a larger size for the
Oberth while the graphics department (as seen in the
Vico cutaway) believed in a smaller size.
(Another tangent point comes to mind... the
Vico, with her NAR designation, still has what we've always assumed to be the Starfleet arrowhead. Weird.)
But anyway, we'd need some place on the ship to rationalize the bridge airlock seen in "The Naked Now". Unless you want to argue we didn't see the bow of Tsiolkovsky's slab the saucer sits on, the engineering hull looks like the only candidate for this kind of airlock or "emergency hatch".
Yeah, that's a tough one.
Reverend put a bridge in the bow of the pod, and rationalized there was a hidden hatch there - which is frankly as good an excuse as any. The problem with using the airlock hatch decal as seen is that the airlock as seen in "The Naked Now" doesn't quite match.
I think the TNG (TV) size is 220m + but I still think we are also looking at a version only 120m in length, i.e. the
Grissom and
Copernicus (intended), the one at the end of ST VII (obviously) and maybe the
Tsiolkovsky and some others, too.
In the size comparisons with Kirk's Enterprise the Oberth Class from TNG definitely looks too big, but then it's a good thing we never saw those ships next to one another in TNG.
Devil's advocate here... why is it too big compared to the
Constitution?
The "saucer" on the
Oberth is a fairly tiny, four deck affair at the larger size. If the pylon underneath is largely uninhabitable, with machinery and cargo bays, and the pod itself is mostly one big equipment bay... she may be big but she doesn't really win in terms of volume. Plus, if she is this big, I'm reasonably certain a turbolift could comfortably fit down the pylons, making it not such a big deal to access the pod.
Plus, all we really have as far as intent is the "mid-size Federation science vessel" line from TSFS script, and the ambiguous "scout class vessel" exchange from the same. She's not as big as the
Enterprise, so that could work for me as mid-sized.
I'm thinking it should be around 180 meters or so. That way there's no discrepancy between Robert's "TNG size" and "movie size."
I have to agree - the half-dozen sizes of bird-of-prey are bad enough. I'd rather find a happy medium.
We could, of course, simply ignore the airlock decal, or choose to believe that there's one there, but not be tied down to the 239 meter size.
Also, another thought occurs to me while staring at the design. Regarding the pod, the silvery details on top and front of the pod almost suggest to me that this silver element sits like a tank nested inside the structure located aft; almost like the aft structure is just a faring or housing for the silver tank thingy. Now, obviously the way the aft structure curves around the front doesn't make the silver part interchangeable (at least not easily) but it's certainly an interesting thought that maybe there's some big thing or collection of things in the silver tank that "actually" takes up most of the pod.