On a related issue, I've been lobbying for adding the second "animated version" auxiliary entrance onto the bridge--not because I think it's great, but because it will simply be a differentiator between us and other shows, and will get people talking about us. Whether people like it or hate it, they'll talk about it.
TNG "discredited" that long before the JJ films.
PCz911 said:If nothing else, jj's movies discredited the "warp engines only come in pairs" retcon
TNG "discredited" that long before the JJ films.
Tng had single nacelle starships? Wow, my memory is fuzzy, I don't remember that at all.
No, but it did have a three nacelled starship (the future 1701-D in 'All Good Things'). The third nacelle naturally not being a part of a "pair".![]()
^ I am agreeable to that explanation, but however we might try and justify it, it still flies in the face of Roddenberry's starship-designs-must-only-have-nacelles-in-pairs 'rule'. It's about the look of the ship. It doesn't matter what purpose the third nacelle actually serves, the bottom line is that it breaks the design convention. The idea that the things can only be in pairs is patently false.![]()
TNG "discredited" that long before the JJ films.
Tng had single nacelle starships? Wow, my memory is fuzzy, I don't remember that at all.
No, but it did have a three nacelled starship (the future 1701-D in 'All Good Things'). The third nacelle naturally not being a part of a "pair".![]()
And, of course, Star Trek from the get-go has featured warp-capable vessels that have no nacelles at all.
Personally, I prefer to think of nacelles as propellers. They transform the ship's power output into motive power, and just as with propellers, a lot of power sometimes is best pumped out by using a lot of propellers. Yet a single one will do - but that doesn't allow for "differential thrust maneuvering", i.e. using propellers to do the job of rudders.
Similar thinking. I've always looked at them as being like the engines on the wings of a commercial aircraft (which was probably Matt Jeffries intention).
Is there a scientific reason why planes tend to have nacelles in pairs? Is it something to do with the areodynamics? An equilibrium?![]()
Real-world, many fighter planes have only one engine.
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