A question about your engine room setup...Okay, here's where things stand at the moment with the engine arrangement...
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I suppose I could put a level deck under the antimatter pod compartment, and going straight forward, that would bring up the antimatter injector assembly up quite a ways, allowing for some room under that hatch.
Thanks for the elaboration CRB, I had similar questions in mind to CLB but had just ascribed it to the "one way mirror" effect or something, perhaps caused by the tremendous energies emitted from the pipes. I also ascribed this "pipe effect" (analogous to the way heat waves bend light that passes through them) to explaining the visual anomalies caused by the forced perspective set; sometimes it appears to be a 60’ long row of pipes which are all the same length – sometimes it looks like a much shorter row of pipes which gradually decrease in length.During the first season, the forward room was the main engine room...
Well, the "length" issue is sort of addressed by the "one way mirror" thing. The idea, as I'd see it, would be that the "row of tubes" is something you're seeing from front and back. If we see six tube sets, that's really three tube sets, then the reflection of those same three from the opposite "mirror" wall. So the numbers we see printed on the aft wall are actually on the same "window" you're looking through.Thanks for the elaboration CRB, I had similar questions in mind to CLB but had just ascribed it to the "one way mirror" effect or something, perhaps caused by the tremendous energies emitted from the pipes. I also ascribed this "pipe effect" (analogous to the way heat waves bend light that passes through them) to explaining the visual anomalies caused by the forced perspective set; sometimes it appears to be a 60’ long row of pipes which are all the same length – sometimes it looks like a much shorter row of pipes which gradually decrease in length.During the first season, the forward room was the main engine room...![]()
I notice that in your cutaway you’ve gone for the shorter row option, but kept the pipes the same length. Using the “pipe effect” this tallies up fine with what we see in the show and all the variable forced perspective problems. Bit of a stretch possibly, but it works I think!
However, that’s just my theory – had you tackled this at all yourself?
There are numbers on the aft wall? I've never seen them myself, but then again I'm working from standard resolution DVDs:...So the numbers we see printed on the aft wall are actually on the same "window" you're looking through...
The mesh has always been a safety concern for me, but this idea makes a good amount of sense, thanks!...And while what was created on-set was clearly just industrial open mesh, the "real" Enterprise has a glass (or "glass-ish") screen with an embedded metallic anti-E/M mesh.
Interestingly, I've been rethinking these as well.I'm starting to rethink the nacelle design, to better match up with the Cochrane's Phoenix and the Galileo, which we are reasonably sure did not have Bussard collectors, yet had those domes on the front of their nacelles (to be fair, the ones on the shuttlecraft didn't light up, although I'll have to take another look at the remastered version of "The Galileo Seven" to be sure on that).
Interestingly, I've been rethinking these as well.I'm starting to rethink the nacelle design, to better match up with the Cochrane's Phoenix and the Galileo, which we are reasonably sure did not have Bussard collectors, yet had those domes on the front of their nacelles (to be fair, the ones on the shuttlecraft didn't light up, although I'll have to take another look at the remastered version of "The Galileo Seven" to be sure on that).
I still really like the idea that the domes are central to the collection of matter, but I'm less convinced that they're actually the "scoops" themselves.
If you take a look in my thread, you'll notice where and how I've placed my hydrogen tanks. What I've started to believe is that the "black ring" around the outside is, in fact, the "hydrogen scoop."
So, then, what's the dome? Well... it's the "space/time sink." (Yes, borrowing a bit from FJ there.)
But it has the interesting property of "sucking" space gas towards it... looking like a gravity source, but projecting that in a conical region ahead of the nacelle.
When the gas streams into the dome, most of it "sloughs off" but the hydrogen is permitted to filter in immediately adjacent to (but not INSIDE) the dome... it then continues to "slough over" the front of the nacelle, where it is captured by the "black ring" and directed into the storage tanks.
This works on a lot of levels. It makes the TMP nacelle fronts "make sense" (even without the "space/time sink," per-se, the nacelle still looks like a gravity well and the captured matter is collected by the black grill, just like in TOS). It fits with the idea that the TOS domes don't really look like "swirling superheated gas" but still have an "aspect of superheated gas."
I'm still playing with my idea... not sure what the details of the mechanism will be... but I think I've become convinced that the domes aren't actually primarily a matter-collection device. They just serve double-duty, as the "attractor" for the matter collected by another device, as well as being central to the TOS-era warp drive design.
Thoughts?
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