Would one of the repair crew put on red coveralls to do dirty repair work? He had about 3 seconds to change clothes.Alternatively, one of the other guys switched into the red coveralls and went with Scott to the no DTD area.
Would one of the repair crew put on red coveralls to do dirty repair work? He had about 3 seconds to change clothes.
Since the previous scene shows Scott and crew next to the console wall nearest the grille, they could have been trying to match the same area from S1 to set up the next two inserted tilt footage scenes (right then left tilts with break to Aux. Control). Reuse of the footage was planned ahead of time and not an afterthought in edit. The director/producer must have had a real hard-on to reuse that footage. I think we need to forget about the continuity issues and assume it was the same room. The last beating of this dead horse; here are the two footages expertly spliced together:
Back in 2012, Robert Comsol re-labelled the secondary hull decks (Kirk's Television Enterprise Deck Plans WIP) which put "Engineering Deck" 8 with Aux. Control at the top forward in the secondary hull. The onscreen scenes in the DM suggest a narrow hull at the entry beam-in point. Also, Aux. Control Ceiling Beams are highly curved in all directions suggesting the complex hull curvature at this location. This re-labelling also put deck 12 at the widest part of secondary hull for those Mudd's Women cabins. I assume Engineering Deck 1 would be the top of the dorsal neck below the Impulse Engine Deck in the Saucer, then count down. So, his ship deck system would be "Deck" 1-11 (YMMV) in the Saucer/Primary Hull, and "Engineering Deck" 1-11 plus "Engineering Deck" or just "Deck" 12+ in the Secondary Hull. He also had 4 "Engineering Levels (1-4 or A, B, C, D?)" subdivided in those Engineering Decks with lots of circular and curved corridors. He used the 1080 foot ship, so, he had more room to play around. I often reference his deck plans especially when I want to get a perspective on scene locations from various episodes. Lots of fun.Well, not this episode alone, at least. We know from the ladder climb, and later dialogue, that Scotty was on a level somewhere below Kirk, who was in Auxiliary Control. We also know from "I, Mudd" (same season) that at least on the Enterprise, the (an?) Auxiliary Control room is on deck eight. There's no feasible way any engine room could fit on deck nine or lower in the saucer section, so that implies a location in the secondary hull.
Yeah, I remember that thread (and revisit it occasionally), and I definitely see the logic in that deck numbering system. It resolves difficulties from a few different episodes. (Granted it might seem a bit confusing when characters don't specify which hull they're referring to, but then 1-7 in the dorsal and secondary hull are probably too small to get much use, as are 10-11 in the saucer, so that really only leaves decks 8-9 as likely sources of misunderstanding most of the time.)Back in 2012, Robert Comsol re-labelled the secondary hull decks (Kirk's Television Enterprise Deck Plans WIP) which put "Engineering Deck" 8 with Aux. Control at the top forward in the secondary hull.
Not again.BTW, I'm (literally) not sure I see what you're referring to when you say Aux Control has ceiling beams "highly curved in all directions"; at least from the screen caps, it looks just like most other rooms on board.
I thought that was a particular clever idea and I've not seen it elsewhere either. It deals with the deck 2 issue in Enterprise Incident, deck 14 in Dagger Of The Mind and deck 12 in Enemy Within & Mudd's Women.Back in 2012, Robert Comsol re-labelled the secondary hull decks (Kirk's Television Enterprise Deck Plans WIP) which put "Engineering Deck" 8 with Aux. Control at the top forward in the secondary hull. The onscreen scenes in the DM suggest a narrow hull at the entry beam-in point. Also, Aux. Control Ceiling Beams are highly curved in all directions suggesting the complex hull curvature at this location. This re-labelling also put deck 12 at the widest part of secondary hull for those Mudd's Women cabins. I assume Engineering Deck 1 would be the top of the dorsal neck below the Impulse Engine Deck in the Saucer, then count down. So, his ship deck system would be "Deck" 1-11 (YMMV) in the Saucer/Primary Hull, and "Engineering Deck" 1-11 plus "Engineering Deck" or just "Deck" 12+ in the Secondary Hull. He also had 4 "Engineering Levels (1-4 or A, B, C, D?)" subdivided in those Engineering Decks with lots of circular and curved corridors. He used the 1080 foot ship, so, he had more room to play around. I often reference his deck plans especially when I want to get a perspective on scene locations from various episodes. Lots of fun.![]()
Navigation inside the Enterprise might not be so hard though, especially if there wasn't a single, contiguous turboshaft which connected from the bottom of the secondary hull to the top of the Bridge. I imagine that in Pike's (and early Kirk's) time turbolift technology was no so advanced, with only vertical shafts at select points and no sideways shafts (although the cars could still rotate). This is why Kirk and Spock had such a long walk from the Transporter Room after bringing the Valiant's disaster-recorder on board and why the ride up to the Bridge was a relatively short, vertical trip. In those days, calling out a deck number would only take you to that deck in the section of the vessel you were in (saucer or engineering hull)...Granted it might seem a bit confusing when characters don't specify which hull they're referring to...
I think that's a reference to a similar recent discussion hereNot again what? I'm just saying, I see one curved ceiling beam, not unlike various other rooms aboard ship. I'm just going from screen caps and haven't rewatched the whole episode recently, so perhaps I'm forgetting something. Can you clarify? Even if the room's at the top of the secondary hull it should only have curves going in one direction, after all, right?...
Not again what? I'm just saying, I see one curved ceiling beam, not unlike various other rooms aboard ship. I'm just going from screen caps and haven't rewatched the whole episode recently, so perhaps I'm forgetting something. Can you clarify? Even if the room's at the top of the secondary hull it should only have curves going in one direction, after all, right?...
Sorry, it was two o'clock in the morning and I was tired. The guys were just grilling me over beams in the damn rec. room.I think that's a reference to a similar recent discussion here
https://www.trekbbs.com/threads/tos-enterprise-internals.298185/page-5
Nah, I got burnt out on my TOS project before I made it to the auxiliary control room or a season one variant of the engine room. However, those are at the top of my list when I do return to the project (I always cycle back around)Sorry, it was two o'clock in the morning and I was tired. The guys were just grilling me over beams in the damn rec. room.Those damn beams are everywhere on the ship.
I'll work on some views, soon. I was checking if @Donny ever got around to the TOS Aux. Control Room, but so far, no luck. Thanks for the fun, guys.
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For a 947 foot ship, where did they get 112 feet in diameter for the secondary hull? I only get about 91 feet. WTF.I assume the book is wrong based on the 33 inch and 11 foot models. Has someone here seen this before, if so, please chime in? What is the real dimension? Thanks.
How much of a Refit was done after WNMHGB?
How much of a Refit was done after WNMHGB?
Nice work. I read the post a little while ago, but I intend to review it again. Thanks for the link.Working through the ideas on this thread has caused me to go back and re-read a lot of older threads and discussions. Here's an interesting one from 2015 where we discussed the possibility of whether the Impulse Engines in TOS make use of antimatter at all:
https://www.trekbbs.com/threads/can-you-transport-anti-matter.201292/page-6
It also features a theory I had concerning the big "cathedral tubes" unit and what it might be:
I see those tubes as the Power Convertor Assembly (first mentioned in Mudd's Women as an alternative to using the lithium crystals). At this stage it might be worth reiterating my own interpretation of TOS-E power setup, which differs somewhat from the TNG model:
The output of the Impulse reactor can also be converted into a compatible energy format using a similar PCA in the saucer Engine Room (and isolated from the main system). A single dilithium circuit is also present here to expedite the process, tied directly to the output of the other 3 in the secondary hull. This means that the saucer Engine Room's dilithium paddle can be used to physically monitor stress on the other paddles (as in Paradise Syndrome)
- Matter and antimatter are mixed in the nacelle interior, with most of the resultant energy forms absorbed directly by the warp coils (without the need for messy TNG-plasma conduits).
- A portion of the energy is diverted down the pylons into secondary hull's Engine Room
- The Power Convertor Assembly changes the raw power into a form usable by ship's systems. The PCA can perform this task alone, although the presence of up to 3 dilithium crystals makes the process exponentially more efficient.
The output of the Impulse reactor can also be converted into a compatible energy format using a similar PCA in the saucer Engine Room (and isolated from the main system). A single dilithium circuit is also present here to expedite the process, tied directly to the output of the other 3 in the secondary hull. This means that the saucer Engine Room's dilithium paddle can be used to physically monitor stress on the other paddles (as in Paradise Syndrome)
Working through the ideas on this thread has caused me to go back and re-read a lot of older threads and discussions. Here's an interesting one from 2015 where we discussed the possibility of whether the Impulse Engines in TOS make use of antimatter at all:
https://www.trekbbs.com/threads/can-you-transport-anti-matter.201292/page-6
It also features a theory I had concerning the big "cathedral tubes" unit and what it might be:
And perhaps the possibly bigger Impulse Deflection Crystal on the Reliant explain or help explain how a ship could be that compact and still so powerful.
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