Any way to reconcile this engine room with Scott's?
Any way to reconcile this engine room with Scott's?
Sure, Scott's engine room is the control room. The image seen in Ask Not is the actual warp core location. They didn't become one and the same until the refit in TMP.
Simple.
Sure, Scott's engine room is the control room. The image seen in Ask Not is the actual warp core location. They didn't become one and the same until the refit in TMP.
This is why I like it. It offers another perspective on something that I think has multiple facets and locations to support the engines of a starship.This could be looking at the main core from an open cargo area that faces into various engineering-related spaces and high-energy labs. The core itself is a tall structure, but not necessarily everything we see here.
I want to see something more functional-looking, but this is certainly better than the roller-coaster turbolifts we've seen.
While I get what youre saying, look at the shape of the Enterprise. If the shape has some kind of purpose or sense, why don't any other species' ships follow that pattern? Why is the most important room a bullseye on the top? It's all just to look cool. Therefore IMO, the internals can be designed to the same standard and need make no more sense. YMMV.It makes no sense (on multiple fronts). First, logically speaking, space inside a space vehicle is precious, and every square foot should be useful. That's how Trek always used to depict it (with minor concessions for dramatic license)
Even Star Wars doesn't really do that with their ships, just the Death Stars. I guess those are technically ships, but they're definitely cases where space is not at a premium. In fact, they have the justification of needing to fill out volume to make their shape; empty space is cheap, if not OSHA-compliant.Anyway, FWIW, the big gaping chasms stuck inside space vessels for no apparent reason are one of the main things (okay, one of the many things) that have always bugged me about Star Wars, and I hate to see that sensibility imported into Trek.
What if it did and we just never saw it? /Pedantic DanThe Enterprise D is Cavernous! and didn't have that!
Again...post scarcity. Efficiency is not a part of the equation at every turn if they are truly post scarcity.As in, it's an exploratory ship, it has open spaces rec decks etc, but it is crammed full of stuff, as in fuel, power systems, water, food, even life support, septic plumbing etc etc..
Just Be inefficient to waste space.
Again...post scarcity. Efficiency is not a part of the equation at every turn if they are truly post scarcity.
Never mind that human beings do well with open spaces, and being in small confined spaces for prolonged periods could be seen as a punishment. Plus, what other requirements might be for other member species.
Open spaces make sense to me.Usable areas like an arboritum make perfect sense. Huge open spaces in the hull that serve no purpose, not so much.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.