Sweet Lord... That's gorgeous.
Your ship in orbit of a planet at 1680x1050 would be an AWESOME wallpaper.![]()
Thanks dude.

In time, in time. I gots all kind o' mad plans for me E eh.

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Sweet Lord... That's gorgeous.
Your ship in orbit of a planet at 1680x1050 would be an AWESOME wallpaper.![]()
Has anyone ever considered a similar tweaking of other space vessels in TOS, namely the Class F shuttlecraft, the Romulan Bird of Prey, K-7, etc.?
The lighting on your sky scene is perfect. I can't wait to see what this baby looks like flying through space!
Absolutely beautiful!
Quick question.....Was there ever an explanation for those triangular shaped panels on the bottom of the saucer section? The original Enterprise has them also and I always wondered what they were (landing leg doors?)
There was some fanon (that was adopted by some of the comics I think) that said the saucer on the original constitution could detach from the neck of the ship as a giant escape pod. Those triangle bits would be fine for landing gear if you're just talking about the saucer.
There would have to be some sort of rear gear as well to stabilize the weight distribution.
One of the semi-pro tech manuals originally available through Lincoln Enterprises (I think it was the "officer's Manual") suggested, via illustrations drawn by Doug Drexler, that the "neck" linking the primary saucer with the engineering cylinder stayed connected to the saucer (rather than the secondary hull). The "neck" served as a third "leg" when the "triangles" angled downwards to form legs. Crew could then exit the "C57D" inspired arrangement via the "neck".
My problem with this arrangement are the "triangles". As depicted in the diagram, their "points" would bear the majority of the saucer's weight. To accomodate the height of the "neck", the triangles had to angle almost vertical. Unless the saucer landed upon solid basalt rock, the triangles would sink into the soil, causing the emergency landing craft to tip dangerously forward.
One thing I did like from that book was the idea the turbolift cars could double as escape pods. There was considerable hardware underneath the floor for life suggest and modest flight correction. The top of the car contained descent foils (parachutes).
Sincerely,
Bill
There would have to be some sort of rear gear as well to stabilize the weight distribution.
No argument there, but even in your own (excellent might I add) model there are any number of panels where some rear gear might pop down.
Is it possible that Mr. Probert might know, since I would imagine that they had met or discussed the Big E for TMP?I'm surprised no one ever asked MJ what the triangles were for?
Oh, I didn't mean to imply that was (gulp, here comes that dreaded word) "canon" (Ugh! What a rancid taste!). It was just those writers' and artists' interpretations. But as you pointed out, where was the "gear" stored? The illustrations showed a telescoping piston linking the point of the "triangle" with the underside of the saucer, a configuration not unlike the Jupiter II. That would consume even more volume.
I just take it for what it really was, the 60s "smooth skin" equilavent of tank part "greeblies", surface detail that merely added visual interest, but the function of which remained a mystery until such time a script might have made reference (which never happened). Basically a GNDN (Goes Nowhere, Does Nothing) element, much like the markings upon the pipes and panels used upon the live action sets.
Sincerely,
Bill
Is it possible that Mr. Probert might know, since I would imagine that they had met or discussed the Big E for TMP?I'm surprised no one ever asked MJ what the triangles were for?
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