Plecostomus
Commodore
Re Mariner: It is possible that modules for Spacedock were built on the ground at various shipyards around the solar system and assembled in orbit.
Skai said:
Simple. The impulse engines are strong enough to do it. The only problem is they will incinerate an area the size of Manhattan when they are activated inside the atmosphere. A little bit of collateral damage.
http://trekmovie.com/2008/01/19/interview-orci-answers-questions-about-new-trek-trailer/TrekMovie.com: So what is your guys logic for setting it on land?
Roberto Orci: Besides the thematic stuff we discussed, which is to connect it to today and make it clear. Firstly, there is the notion that there is precedent in the novels, etc that components of the ship can be built on Earth and assembled here or there. And the second thing is that the Enterprise is not some flimsy yacht that has to be delicately treated and assembled. The idea that things have to be assembled in space has normally been associated with things that don’t have to be in any kind of pressure situation and don’t ever have to ever enter a gravity well. That is not the case with the Enterprise. The Enterprise actually has to sustain warp, which we know is not actually moving but more a warping of space around it. And we know that its decks essentially simulate Earth gravity and so its not the kind of gravity created by centrifugal force, it is not artificially created by spinning it. It is created by an artificial field and so it is
very natural, instead of having to create a fake field in which you are going to have to calibrate everything, to just do it in the exact gravity well in which you are going to be simulating. And the final thing, in order to properly balance warp nacelles, they must be created in a gravity well.
TrekMovie.com: Where did that come from?
Roberto Orci: That comes from our creative license. No one can tell me that it is not possible that in order to create properly balanced warp nacelles they have to be constructed in a gravity well.
TrekMovie.com: Did the dedication plaque [which has ‘San Francisco, Calif. written right on it] factor into your thinking?
Roberto Orci: Yes, that is part of where some of the canon, literary and other sources sparks from.
Roberto Orci: That comes from our creative license. No one can tell me that it is not possible that in order to create properly balanced warp nacelles they have to be constructed in a gravity well.
Vance said:
Roberto Orci: That comes from our creative license. No one can tell me that it is not possible that in order to create properly balanced warp nacelles they have to be constructed in a gravity well.
Oh dear Lord... I know the whole idea of 'no one can tell me' when discussing the fan base just really fills me with enthusiasm.
Plecostomus said:
So they can't make new stuff up because it might conflict with the old stuff? That is going to cause you to skip the movie? The only way to get you to see this movie is to just rehash what has come before and slavishly adhere to the Holy Canon?
Christopher said:
Or rather, it's their trailer. Personally, I'm half-convinced that what we've seen is more meant to be a symbolic image of "the new Star Trek under construction" than a literal representation of the ship's construction or anything that will actually appear in the film. After all, why in the world would they paint the ship's name on the hull so early in the construction process? Most ships don't even get their names decided upon until their commissioning. If that's so, if this is just a symbolic sequence for promotional purposes, then it's pretty silly to get up in arms over it.
...we didn't get a clear sense that the whole ship was in one piece in those scaffolds.
..with the exception of the Enterprise-D/Galaxy in "Booby Trap," and even then, most of the exterior was finished aside from the top of the saucer...
Also, the task of laying parts in place without the needing the artificial gravity brought online until the ship is ready to be placed in orbit.
After all, why in the world would they paint the ship's name on the hull so early in the construction process?
Archer: "Couldn't we just detach that section of hull plating? Let it drift away?"
Tucker: "We'd have to reroute some EPS conduits. There's about 300 bolt couplings. ...It could be done."
Archer: "How long?"
Tucker: "Three or four hours. But I wouldn't recommend it, sir. We'd be exposing a good piece of the impulse manifold."
Mariner Class said:As for the welders, umm, why are people doing this? I can only imagine that having a bunch of drooling buffoons stamping all over an unfinished hull making giant-ass welds is the mark of a sound ship in Star Trek.
Haytil said: If robots could do everything, what would be the point of HUMANITY doing the exploring?
starburst said:
Main problems with the 1701 being built is could it reach orbit in one piece...I dont buy the "they will put it together in space they are just building the parts" argument because why have the engines positioned where they should be!
Other thing is the weather in the open could do some damage to the structure, it would have been better for them to build it under ground like they did with Prometheus in SG-1
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