• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Another thought on the torpedo bays on the refit Enterprise

"I'm not the one who {...}" is typically a turn of phrase directed at the one who did the thing. Obviously that wasn't your intent here, but it did seem designed to suggest there was some bumbling buffoon who couldn't manage to remain consistent from one detail to the next. Such a buffoon mythology would then be useful to justify a 'careful', 'considered' rescaling by ever-so-wiser folk.

If you're looking for a villain with respect to the window issue, it's probably Harold Michelson. There's even a pic at the link I provided of him pointing to the exterior windows on the model to be modified, and of course he was in charge of the Rec Deck set design.

Except the original, pre-Michelson windows are also too close together on the saucer. Look at the gangway door. It spans from the bottom of the lower window to the top of the upper one, and it's clearly meant to be not more than one deck high, compared to the bridge and the round airlocks.

Cute strawman. At no point did I suggest that Probert's round-number lengths were my goal. (Besides which, I do all my starship stuff in metric so it does me no good.)

I'm not saying it's your goal, I'm saying it's (probably) the dumb reason the size of the ship is what it is.

I said "changing size established by other evidence is icky" and lamented magic bullet single-error claims used as "casus belli against all other scaling". You'll note the multiple and not the singular.
What other evidence? What evidence points to a 305 meter ship? It's not the size of the Rec Deck. It's not the size of the shuttlebay. It's not the size of the bridge or the docking ports, thanks to the AMT model being used on screen.

In fact, what's this about evidence at all? There's a set of known size that corresponds directly to an exterior feature on the model, and your reaction to drawing a conclusion based on that was, and I quote, ":barf:"

It really does sound like you just want to defer to the official number and not consider any alternative, regardless of how sensible or well-thought-out that figure is.

Since you also provided a partial list of things that would become contradictory at that point, noting issues with the airlock size and position along with other things, there's a whiff of projection about suggesting I'm fixated on some singular reason to maintain length (just as the rescalers tend to latch on to a single reason to change it).

What "would"? That was a list of things that are already contradictory between the various models of the ship.
 
While it would make the airlock doors MASSIVE, a refit Enterprise double the size would at least be able to fit in the Rec Deck into the purported location on the edge of the saucer. Without that size increase, the windows simply don't match!

JNOJ7qM.jpg
I’m down with that
 
Except the original, pre-Michelson windows are also too close together on the saucer.

To you. I realize there's an appeal in having every window at eye height for a standing human, but this may instead be a clue about the structure of the ship along the rim.

Look at the gangway door. It spans from the bottom of the lower window to the top of the upper one, and it's clearly meant to be not more than one deck high, compared to the bridge and the round airlocks.

How did you think this argument aided you? It seems a fundamentally meaningless inclusion to me.

I'm not saying it's your goal
It's funny how you then promptly say: "It really does sound like you just want to defer to the official number and not consider any alternative".

What evidence points to a 305 meter ship?

You know as well as I do. Demanding I recite it all is just an attempt to create busy-work.

It's not the size of the Rec Deck. It's not the size of the shuttlebay. It's not the size of the bridge or the docking ports, thanks to the AMT model being used on screen.

The AMT model has tons of well-documented problems, both during the 'smoothie' era and in the retooling. They used them for convenience, just like the Constellation and the Enterprise out of the K-7 window, and in distance views. Analyzing that model too closely (not from screenshots but the model) with the knowledge of its differences and trying to rescale from it seems disingenuous at best.


There's a set of known size that corresponds directly to an exterior feature on the model, and your reaction to drawing a conclusion based on that was, and I quote, ":barf:"

Nice partial quotation out of context.

Put simply, I could just as easily point to the observation lounge thing in Star Trek V, declare that big apparent window to be one of the wide windows around the saucer, say it is two meters tall, and claim the ship to be almost a kilometer long. That'd be icky, too.
 
To you. I realize there's an appeal in having every window at eye height for a standing human, but this may instead be a clue about the structure of the ship along the rim.
Maybe there's just one deck on the saucer with windows on the top and bottom. Maybe they're not even windows at all! They're sensors, or deflector emitters, or Christmas lights, and the inner windows are all screens. Maybe the inside of the ship is sideways, like on The Expanse! Anything is possible (or, rather, required) when you insist on taking an arbitrarily-decided number as gospel over everything else.

How did you think this argument aided you? It seems a fundamentally meaningless inclusion to me.

Of course it would. You don't care about what the design is, just the number that was given to you on a list. If a person-sized door (based on comparisons with the sacrosanct hero-model travel pod hatches and the travel pod set) is obviously a deck-and-a-half tall, well, that's just meaningless.

It's funny how you then promptly say: "It really does sound like you just want to defer to the official number and not consider any alternative".

Yeah, and I'd say that was your only argument even if the official number was 266 meters, or 537 feet, or 999 cubits. Probert's reason for starting this mess and your reason for insisting we all have to live in it and can't even imagine anything else can be two different things.

You know as well as I do. Demanding I recite it all is just an attempt to create busy-work.
Why do people always say that? Is that a concession? I give a bunch of reasons why the official number doesn't make sense, and that the only thing going for it is that it's official, and now you're telling me that I've got it both sides covered?

The AMT model has tons of well-documented problems, both during the 'smoothie' era and in the retooling. They used them for convenience, just like the Constellation and the Enterprise out of the K-7 window, and in distance views. Analyzing that model too closely (not from screenshots but the model) with the knowledge of its differences and trying to rescale from it seems disingenuous at best.


So? It's the ship that was in the movies. At this point you've disregarded all the sets, the primary model, and now the secondary models, because they're all compromised in some way. You keep making it clear that there's only one thing that matters to you when it comes to reconciling them.

Behold, DSG2k's canon diagram of the TMP Enterprise, with all necessary elements! All questions are answered, all disputes are settled, by careful examination of these detailed plans:

——————————————— (305 m)

Nice partial quotation out of context.
Would the other smilies really help?
Put simply, I could just as easily point to the observation lounge thing in Star Trek V, declare that big apparent window to be one of the wide windows around the saucer, say it is two meters tall, and claim the ship to be almost a kilometer long. That'd be icky, too.

Sure. Or you can say there are magic seamless shutters that pop open and closed between shots. Or you can add extra windows to the outside of the model, that's become pretty popular recently. Also, icky or not, deciding they're the normal windows and the ship's really big has been done.
 
Wow. LOL.

So, to review, I expressed disgust at the recent penchant for folks to try to rescale (typically embiggen) every ship, often with genius moves like "why not just... pretend {some details are} smaller on the model" to justify it ( a quote from you in this thread, by the way).

You tossed out the idea that my goal was a defense of Probert's round numbers, which I don't even use or typically remember because I work in metric for this. You backpedaled but then leaned right back into it, and in this post speak of little else than the notion that I am some minion of orthodoxy.

"You don't care about what the design is, just the number that was given to you on a list."

"Yeah, and I'd say that was your only argument even if the official number was 266 meters, or 537 feet, or 999 cubits. Probert's reason for starting this mess and your reason for insisting we all have to live in it and can't even imagine anything else can be two different things."

"You keep making it clear that there's only one thing that matters to you when it comes to reconciling them.

Behold, DSG2k's canon diagram of the TMP Enterprise, with all necessary elements! All questions are answered, all disputes are settled, by careful examination of these detailed plans:



——————————————— (305 m)"

Maybe there's just one deck on the saucer with windows on the top and bottom. Maybe they're not even windows at all! They're sensors, or deflector emitters, or Christmas lights, and the inner windows are all screens. Maybe the inside of the ship is sideways, like on The Expanse! Anything is possible (or, rather, required) when you insist on taking an arbitrarily-decided number as gospel over everything else.

Way to show that rescalers are reasonable and apt to consider things carefully. At the merest suggestion that the round and oval windows on the widest saucer deck aren't at a height we might assume, you've jumped to mockery with absurdities rather than give up on a potential rescaling argument.

That tells me that your entire bit about other people being fixated on defending the Probert number is actually projection. You are fixated on having an argument against that number.

For reasonable people, the extant scaling and evidence for it has inertia which a rescaling argument must overcome. It isn't overcome with a single magic bullet ('zomg that door is wrong height so ship is k1l0M3t3rZ!1!') nor is it overcome by ignoring or mocking simple fixes that nullify a rescaler's argument.

If the fact that the existing scale is the default position makes you mad, that's all you and good luck with that.

If a person-sized door (based on comparisons with the sacrosanct hero-model travel pod hatches and the travel pod set) is obviously a deck-and-a-half tall, well, that's just meaningless.

Your argument was that the gangway hatch was between windows, and therefore too tall. I am saying is that it is obviously placed in the center of the saucer rim vertically, so is logically between decks (as has been hypothesized since Shane Johnson, IIRC).

Your now-expanded argument that this makes it 1.5 decks tall is nullified.

Why do people always say that? Is that a concession?
LOL, no. Your request is on par with saying "I reject the fact of man landing on the moon because (single little reason), present all the evidence that we did." You're basically demanding a research project of your opponent rather than doing your own homework and presenting your counterexamples.

More to the point, you're a long-time regular on a forum where it has been done to death, with you participating in the threads, and you're feigning ignorance?

Put simply, with me as someone who only sporadically drops in on TrekBBS, you ought to be able to run complete circles around me on this topic, not struggle as you've done so far.

I give a bunch of reasons why the official number doesn't make sense
You've referenced the ill fit of the Rec Deck, mismatch of docking ports between different models (albeit without demonstrating that the AMT difference is significant on-screen), and your bit about the gangway. Oh, and some random reference to the shuttlebay, presumably regarding Star Trek V where IIRC the bay is too small, not too large.

So? It's the ship that was in the movies.
LOL. So they use the AMT model in some faraway shots and now it's the absolute highest canon model, to you, outstripping the enormous and expensive model and even smaller partials?

If rescalers had good arguments, stuff like this would do a disservice to them.

At this point you've disregarded all the sets,
Wrong.

the primary model,
That's projection.

and now the secondary models,
Just the one with known problems, but nice attempt to sneak in an expansion to the list.

because they're all compromised in some way.
I have presented evidence, unlike you.
Would the other smilies really help?
Context matters, smilies and words.

Also, icky or not, deciding they're the normal windows and the ship's really big has been done.

The decision in the other universe to embiggen the ship to match all their other bog ships was not based on ST5, but okay. Is your argument of large size for the refit now to be based on the Discoverse? That would tend to be the last redoubt of rescalers, I would think.
 
Wow. LOL.

So, to review, I expressed disgust at the recent penchant for folks to try to rescale (typically embiggen) every ship, often with genius moves like "why not just... pretend {some details are} smaller on the model" to justify it ( a quote from you in this thread, by the way).

Yes, unlike "The windows are definitely on the floor or ceiling, rather than a height where people can see out of them," something that's totally unsupported and yet you've taken so deeply to heart you can't even understand the concept that "identical windows one above the other are probably each about the same height from the floor."

And it seems sensible that "rescalers," a theoretical bloc that you've invented and assigned me to be the representative of, keep making things bigger and rarely make them smaller. Of course no one wants to "fix" the "problem" of interiors fitting inside exteriors with room to spare, and only wants to talk about it when official sizes would have rooms sticking out the sides and heads scraping ceilings.
Way to show that rescalers are reasonable and apt to consider things carefully. At the merest suggestion that the round and oval windows on the widest saucer deck aren't at a height we might assume, you've jumped to mockery with absurdities rather than give up on a potential rescaling argument.

That tells me that your entire bit about other people being fixated on defending the Probert number is actually projection. You are fixated on having an argument against that number.

Because it doesn't fit. I don't have to have this argument about Voyager. How would it be possible to argue the ship doesn't make sense at the official size without arguing against the official size? You're the one who insists on it, if there wasn't an official figure, if we were just trying to figure out how big it should be from observation of the sets and models and how they were used in the films, then I could still argue for whatever size I wanted, but what would your position be? And yet I'm the one who's obsessed with a number I'm arguing is better left ignored?

For reasonable people, the extant scaling and evidence for it has inertia which a rescaling argument must overcome. It isn't overcome with a single magic bullet ('zomg that door is wrong height so ship is k1l0M3t3rZ!1!') nor is it overcome by ignoring or mocking simple fixes that nullify a rescaler's argument.

"Spock was the first Vulcan in Starfleet" had "inertia" even though "The Immunity Syndrome" had made it obviously wrong from the jump and it was eventually conclusively disproven. Also, "the number is now, has been, and ever shall be the number" isn't exactly disproving the "minion of orthodoxy" thing.

Your argument was that the gangway hatch was between windows, and therefore too tall. I am saying is that it is obviously placed in the center of the saucer rim vertically, so is logically between decks (as has been hypothesized since Shane Johnson, IIRC).

Your now-expanded argument that this makes it 1.5 decks tall is nullified.

Nope, you skipped the important bit. That door could be taller than a deck, no problem, it's how it fits with everything else that's the issue.

1. The gangway's bottom is parallel with the bottom of the lower rim windows. The gangway's top is parallel with the top of the upper rim windows.

2. It is reasonable to assume that the windows on the saucer rim are all approximately the same height from the deck and ceiling. Wait, did I say "assume"? I meant "conclude." The is no evidence to support your unshakable axiom that one level's windows are on the floor and/or another's are on the ceiling. Not the concept art, not the sets, not anything.

3. The gangway is about the same height as the circular docking ports, which also have a known height.

Therefore, if all of that is true, and no details are altered on the sets, models, or official figures, the deck height of the saucer rim must be a fraction of the height of the circular docking ports.

More to the point, you're a long-time regular on a forum where it has been done to death, with you participating in the threads, and you're feigning ignorance?

Yeah, I'm a long-time regular. That's why I've been convinced that a bigger ship makes more sense rather than just repeating an arbitrarily-derived official number. There have been diagrams, 3D reconstructions, overlays. Much more argument has been put forth for why the official size is wrong than why it's right. I think this might be the first time anyone has taken a hard stand demanding respect for the official figures in a fannish discussion (people defend the official figures when new official figures come out (and that's probably more complaining about the accompanying redesigns) but, when it's just us kids joshing around, people are usually more relaxed about contradicting the tech manuals and sourcebooks).

Put simply, with me as someone who only sporadically drops in on TrekBBS, you ought to be able to run complete circles around me on this topic, not struggle as you've done so far.

You posted a puke emoji, you didn't ask for my conversion testimony. I'll cite chapter and verse at the end if that's what you need.

You've referenced the ill fit of the Rec Deck, mismatch of docking ports between different models (albeit without demonstrating that the AMT difference is significant on-screen), and your bit about the gangway. Oh, and some random reference to the shuttlebay, presumably regarding Star Trek V where IIRC the bay is too small, not too large.

No, I was talking about the TMP shuttlebay, but let's put a pin in that.

LOL. So they use the AMT model in some faraway shots and now it's the absolute highest canon model, to you, outstripping the enormous and expensive model and even smaller partials?

The partials are worse. You want to break out the ruler and show me this bad boy is consistent with a 305 meter ship? Or the bridge close-ups showing the saucer is either a cone or perfectly flat on top?

The decision in the other universe to embiggen the ship to match all their other bog ships was not based on ST5, but okay. Is your argument of large size for the refit now to be based on the Discoverse? That would tend to be the last redoubt of rescalers, I would think.

Brothers and sisters, I was once like our friend here. I was seduced by the simplicity of dicta. The ship's size is the size of the ship, easily found in the Star Trek Encyclopedia, attested to by the revelation of scaling charts. I scorned people who took the easy way out of making the ship bigger to "make sense." But, my heart nursed doubts. First, it was the world of Babylon 5, where the official figures... changed! Most infamously, the White Star, a small, fast hot-rod of a ship, jumped from 118 meters long, to 268 meters long to match the bridge set as built (fair enough), to almost 500 meters to accommodate a fighter bay larger than required to meet the needs of the narrative. It seemed absurd, that this ship whose defining feature was that it was smaller than anything else, and flew like a fighter, was bigger than almost every Starship Enterprise. The people making the decisions were wrong. Just... wrong.

But that couldn't be the case in Star Trek! Babylon 5's visual effects were home-spun, the designers, animators, and modelers (who were often the same person) scrambling under tight deadlines to put together anything that would work. Star Trek was so engineered, so grounded. Every ship had diagrams and blueprints and deck plans, they were even on the sets, ten feet across! They had to know what they were doing, they had to be scrupulous, right?

But then cracks formed. I learned about how the Enterprise-D saucer had been one deck thick, then it became two when they built the Ten Forward set, then the second studio model had the design changed to reflect that, but most people didn't care for that, so we've still got two squished decks in the saucer rim that's only thick enough for one. I saw that Mr. Spock's head would scape the ceiling of every deck on the Excelsior. I'd known about the Defiant, the Bird of Prey, but those weren't just the isolated problem-children of Treknology that I'd been led to believe, the issue seemed pervasive. Then I saw the worse of it. The TMP Enterprise, the coolest-looking, most detailed Star Trek ship... and the cargo bay designed and painted by Mr. Slide Rule himself would poke out the sides, and needed a ramp (a ramp!) for the travel pod airlock to meet the deck. The worst of it was when I tried to put rooms behind the windows myself, and both saucer rim decks had to be squished down absurdly, and almost everything else was as cramped as a submarine, nothing like the luxurious spaces seen in the actual movie. But things always made sense once you made the ship bigger.

Too many compromises. Too little sense. Too much cheating. But what if... what if I just made the ship big enough so the windows made sense? So the innards fit without being visibly distorted, as I'd kept having to do?

Finally it came to me: It's all made up! The ships, the sets, the numbers, they're all imperfect reflections of some platonic ideal out in the Sci-Fi Heaven of Forms, a shared dream we're all trying to grasp. The sets don't match the models. The models don't match each other. None of it matches the deckplans. There were multiple models of the TMP Enterprise, and the scale-establishing features were differently sized on every one. And no one notices! No one cares! I could image, I could build a model where the windows were a little higher, or a little lower, where the circular airlocks were a tick smaller, where the fantail lined up with the middeck, where the whole ship was a bit longer, and no one would even know unless I told them! We can reconcile everything, make compromises slight enough to go unnoticed, once we let go of the dogma of the official stated ship lengths. The mad visions of Timo have shown the way; we're all just making this shit up! Think outside the box, you might find something that works.

My point in bringing up the ILM AMT model was that this proposed hypothetical, rationalized TMP Enterprise, should I ever build it (it's fairly far down the project list, and so many other people have so many good versions, I like to take on projects where I can really raise the bar) would probably look more like the eight-footer at a casual glance than the screen-used AMT model did, but everything would fit together. It was a justification for knowingly reimagining the design rather than insisting on smashing the square peg into the round hole; I'm confident you can adjust the details of the ship to concord better and still have a smaller apparent difference to the hero miniature than the many "close enough" models actually used in production.
 
Last edited:
This is part one.

Your messages are getting weirder and weirder.

For one thing, the notion that I'm some slavish devotee to official numbers is pretty silly. I have a whole thing going with determining the proper scales of ships via analysis as opposed to just accepting whatever nonsense has been pushed out (cough DS9TM cough).

But hey, I get it. Interiors and exteriors sometimes don't fit. In the case of the "24 foot shuttlecraft" from TOS, they prioritized production ease and actor comfort by making the interior standing height, contrary to the exterior. For TOS, the corridor ceilings (ceiling height being a notorious issue) didn't exist, but for certain low angle shots they slapped in faux ceilings and didn't necessarily get the height right. The Sovereign Class bridge complex and the Eaves exterior are laughably out of whack. David Stipes exists. Model-builders might not have had specific window locations, just a drill and a will. These things happen. Hollywood gives less of a damn about this than we do, and . . . in some specific cases . . . rightly so.

The reason I oppose the rescalers as a group is because they don't analyze. They find a wedge, a magic bullet which supercedes all other evidence, in their mind, and claim it's the only way to make things (be it the wedge issue or some other pet thought of theirs) work . . . and it usually isn't.

Second, you keep doing this thing where I mention something and all the sudden that's like some core principle of mine or something. Check this out:

Yes, unlike "The windows are definitely on the floor or ceiling, rather than a height where people can see out of them," something that's totally unsupported and yet you've taken so deeply to heart you can't even understand the concept that "identical windows one above the other are probably each about the same height from the floor."

Also:

The is no evidence to support your unshakable axiom that one level's windows are on the floor and/or another's are on the ceiling.

What even is that? I'm not sure I've seen anyone go that weird before. It's like you've made a straw man and given him a crack pipe and a PCP IV.

I proposed windows not at eye level as a solution, and it's not even original to me. But, to you, I've "taken it so deeply to heart" as an "unshakeable axiom" that I'm completely blind to anything else. What the hell? Get a grip, my guy. I'm not even sure I should be replying because I'm a little worried about you at this point.

Anyway, as far as not being original to me, here are two different solutions based on the idea. First, we have Lestatdelc who posted the idea of (gasp!) varying deck levels. This is, I'm sure, pure sin to you, but given the curving bottom of the rim it makes perfect sense to me.

LestatDelc-305m-saucerrim-decks5&6.jpg


Then there's DanGovier's idea which I was actually thinking of at the time -- part of his effort to not just do a 3-D model of the Enterprise but to engineer the thing with pipes and framing and such (bless that madman) -- that the windows would work like gangbusters at a level that looks to me to be great for sitting, not to mention fitting the direction of the frames if cut in at 90 degrees to the hull.

DanGovier-305m-saucer_decks.png


DanGovier-305m-kirk-window-deck5.png

So, now that this is my new religion or whatever the hell weirdness you're trying to attribute to me, Lestatdelc and DanGovier are my prophets, I guess, along with yotsuya's properly scaled Enterprise internals. All hail the holy builders. May the ones who have left us return to further bless us someday.

Back to weirdness, here's another example:

Also, "the number is now, has been, and ever shall be the number" isn't exactly disproving the "minion of orthodoxy" thing.

Like, dude. I said "For reasonable people, the extant scaling and evidence for it has inertia which a rescaling argument must overcome. It isn't overcome with a single magic bullet ('zomg that door is wrong height so ship is k1l0M3t3rZ!1!') nor is it overcome by ignoring or mocking simple fixes that nullify a rescaler's argument."

Literally, did you not even read that? Did you not comprehend that I was not rejecting rescaling prima facie, just the crap arguments of you and yours where something is noticed and is revered like a religious icon? To be sure, I will happily warn against rescaling well-known objects as an easy elixir for whatever ails you, as it is so often treated, but I thought it would've been pretty clear that I indicated there *is* a standard of evidence at which point rescaling becomes an option.

You just have to meet it.

And it seems sensible that "rescalers," a theoretical bloc that you've invented and assigned me to be the representative of,
[Obi-Wan] You have done that yourself! [/Obi-Wan]

Because it doesn't fit.
Yes, the saucer rim windows fit. 'They fit and they're spectacular!'

I don't have to have this argument about Voyager.

You're the one who was just indicating Voyager needed to be upscaled, too, to match the airlock to the Borg who got spaced.

Nope, you skipped the important bit. That door could be taller than a deck, no problem, it's how it fits with everything else that's the issue.
The gangway hatch is between decks. That it is in the middle of a two-deck structure would've made that pretty obvious, I'd have thought, but you keep going on about it.

1. The gangway's bottom is parallel with the bottom of the lower rim windows. The gangway's top is parallel with the top of the upper rim windows.
Congrats?
2. It is reasonable to assume that the windows on the saucer rim are all approximately the same height from the deck and ceiling. Wait, did I say "assume"? I meant "conclude." The is no evidence to support your unshakable axiom that one level's windows are on the floor and/or another's are on the ceiling. Not the concept art, not the sets, not anything.
That's the Rec Deck, dude. We're not talking about the Rec Deck, because you specifically wanted it compared to the portholes and wide oval windows beside it. Why switch it up?

If you want to insist that the Rec Deck windows on a set with known issues fitting in the ship at all apply to the portholes and wide ovals around the rest of the saucer . . . well, you can make that claim, but it takes nothing at all to nullify it because we've never seen a room that matches them.

3. The gangway is about the same height as the circular docking ports, which also have a known height.

Therefore, if all of that is true, and no details are altered on the sets, models, or official figures, the deck height of the saucer rim must be a fraction of the height of the circular docking ports.

You broke down in number two, so no points this round, sorry.

Yeah, I'm a long-time regular. That's why I've been convinced that a bigger ship makes more sense rather than just repeating an arbitrarily-derived official number.

What an odd phrasing. The "arbitrarily-derived official number" is the number to which the ship was designed, which makes it neither arbitrary nor derived.
There have been diagrams, 3D reconstructions, overlays.
Same for the regular sizes.

I think this might be the first time anyone has taken a hard stand demanding respect for the official figures in a fannish discussion

If rescaling arguments can't withstand challenge, should we believe them?

The partials are worse. You want to break out the ruler and show me this bad boy is consistent with a 305 meter ship?

Other than the windows not being laterally correct, what's the problem? It seems to match this exterior shot nicely enough (the pod being closer to the camera a bit).

TMP-TravelPodLiningUp.jpg


I mean, they were using the docking port as a yardstick, here, and the pod was entirely designed around the scale to fit it. What's the problem?

Or the bridge close-ups showing the saucer is either a cone or perfectly flat on top?

Nah, I'm calling BS here. You're just fluffing your argument by posting random things. The shape of the upper hull (decks 3 and 4), or trying to fake it with lighting on a model they're detonating, has diddly squat to do with the scale of the ship. They got the shape wrong in the original matte painting of Kirk and company on the hull, too. That's not evidence of anything.

First, it was the world of Babylon 5

That explains a lot.

I'm very sorry they embiggened your Whitestar, but that has eff all to do with the Enterprise.
 
Last edited:
Oh, and one more thing before part two:

Or you can say there are magic seamless shutters that pop open and closed between shots.

While not exactly seamless, the simple fact is that Airlock 4 exists.

TMP-Airlock4-Kirk-VernonWilmer.jpg


So, if you absolutely must hide an extra window on the Enterprise somewhere, it's not impossible.
 
This is part one.
You know what? Just stop. I don't enjoy this. I don't like you lecturing me about how your stupid ideas about how the sets are all wrong are better than my stupid ideas about how the models are all wrong. I don't like you condescending to me like this is a 1998 flame war and dragging me down to that level.

I concede. I will never again suggest an imaginary spaceship is anything other the official size.

I have a whole thing going with determining the proper scales of ships via analysis as opposed to just accepting whatever nonsense has been pushed out (cough DS9TM cough).

...until I've run it by you first, apparently, because it's okay when you do it.
 
Perhaps it would be best if everyone took a step back and cooled off a bit. My brain isn't ideally suited to calculating what the scales of different components ideally should be, and even then I wouldn't expect it to match what we actually see onscreen for various reasons. I learned a long time ago that such consistency is generally not that consistent. :D

It's kind of like the various theories for how registries are supposed to work. I myself prefer a block system within a class, because I think that's the least problematic option personally, but I'm also aware it doesn't solve all of the potential issues with registries. A lot of them were simply made up on the fly, so I don't think any one solution would be ideal.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top