Of course they are!That's all reasonable, except that shuttlecraft such as those that appeared on TOS were warp capable, though I'm not sure whether you're saying otherwise.

I was thinking more of the TNG era shuttlepods
Of course they are!That's all reasonable, except that shuttlecraft such as those that appeared on TOS were warp capable, though I'm not sure whether you're saying otherwise.
WESLEY: ETA thirteen thirty hours, sir. It's not exactly warp speed.
PICARD: More like a late twenty-second century interplanetary journey.
WESLEY: Sir?
PICARD: You should read more history, Ensign.
WESLEY: Yes, sir.
Happy Wednesday folks!
I generally find the idea of shuttles with any semblance of nacelles or pods being warp "optional" to be an appealing one, as it would explain some of the inconsistencies that we've seen over the years.. It would make some sense that the smaller warp reactors in shuttles would be easily removable for maintenance anyway, so extend that logic to make it such that you could fly the ship without the reactor installed and she wouldn't be warp-capable. The warp nacelles would essentially be dormant. Certainly most shuttles would be structurally able to endure warp, and then range would be a factor of power and fuel supply.
For Excelsior, my plan was to depict the ship having several standard TFF shuttles, which would have been designed as part of the Excelsior development project. These would be augmented by the addition of one or two of the "executive" shuttlecraft from TUC, and in turn supplemented by a few travel pods and workbees/CMUs. I would assume the TFF and TUC shuttles would be "warp optional" at the very least, while the travel pod and workbee presumably not. (A warp sled for a workbee has surely been on someone's mind at some point, though.)
I have just a few incremental updates on the schematic to share today. I have the side/dorsal/ventral views mostly complete minus details and am working on the forward view, continuing to us them to check against each other as well as my secondary resources. I am hoping by this weekend to have the side, dorsal, ventral, forward, and aft views roughed in enough that I can share a comparison for review.
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I am also really enjoying One Constant Star, so I'm rather glad to have found out about it. Once I'm done with that there are some historical/registry analysises that I'm going to delve into and share with you guys.
WOW I've seen those pictures a thousand times and never placed those greebles as docked mini Jenolen's. Good spot.Hey Praetor you talked about giving the Excelsior two or three executive shuttles in this post and I wanted to let you know if you didn't already that the Excelsior had two of them docked in her lower Cargo/Shuttle area in Star Trek 6. The 22nd picture down from the top.
https://imgur.com/a/V98w5
That looks like the USS Melbourne which got the SD-103 type shuttles, which makes sense as it appeared after ST VI . This makes four physical models of this shuttle type - the SD-103, the one parked at the Enterprise-B space dock, and the two here.
I thought there was some mutli-labeling going on there! I bet when it first appeared as the Hood and Repulse they re-labeled it entirely, but then re-labeled it entirely again for Star Trek VI, and only changed the top saucer and engine registry for "Emissary." (And great model, btw.)
I recently read a passage in One Constant Star that describes the Enterprise-B's auxiliary complement thus:
2 Gagarin-class warp shuttles
12 Class-H shuttlecraft
6 Cargo management units (work bees)
I feel fairly certain that the Gagarin-class shuttle is meant to be the SD-103 model, and the Class-H is the Galileo-5 style shuttlecraft.
I have just a little progress to show today. Much further to go, but I'm happy with it so far. You may not be able to tell, but I've moved a LOT of stuff just a little here and there, to get things to match up. The recent treasure trove of photos has proven a big help, too.
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This is, incidently, how I envision sheets one and two being laid out, but with some callouts that aren't there yet.
After a few more tweaks and checks I'm heading to mapping out decks.![]()
Hmm. Interesting.
It wouldn't surprise me that an earlier post-Constitution class incarnation of USS Hood might have been part of the same production batch of Excelsiors as Repulse 2544.
Almost correct Praetor. ILM did relabel it completely for the Hood but for the Repulse only the top of the saucer was changed and maybe the bottom but I'm not to sure about that. They for sure didn't change the engine decals because that's how we found out about the Hood having a different number for the TNG pilot NCC-2541 you can see the Hoods number on the back of the engines in the episode The Child even though the ship was the Repulse. The Hoods number was later changed to NCC-42296. The Repulse was NCC-2544.
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