Deks said:
Well if they are going for the earlier design of the ship, then it's possible it got scaled down as TOS era came about.
What I find intriguing and a bit ... strange is that humans are welding the plates on their own on Earth no less.
For a supposed warp capable species, you would think they would have automated technology in the 23rd century that would speed up construction a lot and people would not be doing those kinds of jobs (just doesn't fit with the supposed 'centuries ahead tech society'
Then again, this IS the Enterprise ... so it's possible that the writers could explain it that humanity decided to put in manual work into construction of this ship.
Oh don't get me wrong, I will enjoy the movie one way or the other, but it doesn't make sense to waste time constructing a starship with manual labor when you should have the technology and almost a century of space exploration behind you that would get the job done at least 10x as fast.
No wonder it takes so long for SF to construct ships.
They aren't using technology or machines to aid them.
Deks said:
Well if they are going for the earlier design of the ship, then it's possible it got scaled down as TOS era came about.
What I find intriguing and a bit ... strange is that humans are welding the plates on their own on Earth no less.
For a supposed warp capable species, you would think they would have automated technology in the 23rd century that would speed up construction a lot and people would not be doing those kinds of jobs (just doesn't fit with the supposed 'centuries ahead tech society'
Then again, this IS the Enterprise ... so it's possible that the writers could explain it that humanity decided to put in manual work into construction of this ship.
Oh don't get me wrong, I will enjoy the movie one way or the other, but it doesn't make sense to waste time constructing a starship with manual labor when you should have the technology and almost a century of space exploration behind you that would get the job done at least 10x as fast.
No wonder it takes so long for SF to construct ships.
They aren't using technology or machines to aid them.
Scott Hayden said:
I think you are overestimating the height of this man. Is he standing or kneeling. Why don't measure the man head rather the body. I think these 2m are closer to 1/2 to 1m at height.
I'm using the HD version of the teaser for measurements and images.trevanian said:
EDIT ADDON: this most recent image looks a lot sharper, is somebody tweaking it or is this another more recent version of the trailer?
Jackson_Roykirk said:
Yeah, but what about the guy in the upper left of the opening in your OP photo (in front of the "P" in 'ENTERPRISE')? I could be wrong, but that looks like the upper torso of a welder (at least from the chest up - like a bust).
If that is a welder, then he would be way too big using your 2 m stick.
RAMA said:
Its exactly the same size. I think the fact that it was shown mostly in close up is making people think its larger than it is. Remember they used that technique in STTMP too. From the look of the saucer section, its no larger than a modern aircraft carrier, IE: about the same size as the original 1701.
RAMA
Lonemagpie said:
I make it two 3-metre (max height) decks with a 1.5 or 2-metre set of service tubes at the top. Call it a metre between layers and for hull thickness maximum, and you've got a saucer edge 11 or 12 metres thick at best, not 20-odd.
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