Hunger deck?![]()
My keyboard is disintergrating at the moment, it's been causing some fun typos lately.
Hunger deck?![]()
Yep, I'm mindful of that. I've got some detailing in mind that will set it apart more, but it is indeed a balancing act.My only word of caution would be to detail it so as to distinguish it a bit more
It can be challenging and sometimes frustrating, but when it comes together there is a bit of elation and an "ah-ha" moment. I'm also gratified on feeling more competent with SketchUp so that I don't feel seriously daunted undertaking certain projects.You are having fun with Sketchup, aren't you?
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I don't think it's as bad as it used to be, but too often I've seen designs that are basically a rearranging of existing parts. I could see how that got started seeing as how Franz Joseph basically did just that in his Star Fleet Technical Manual. But it really isn't a credible or interesting way to design. But, hey, in fairness you've got to start somewhere before you gain the confidence of your own ideas.Lookin good, I like this approach.
Too many pre TOS fan designs look like tupperware containers that were fused together in a horrible accident - including some of my own lol.
I tried it with a shorter neck (and the current one is really moderately longer than the sketch) and I didn't care for it that's why I went with the one I have presently.I think you said you made the neck a bit longer from the sketch on purpose, but looking at it with all these pics. I really think it would benefit from reducing the neck, make it more compact. It looks a bit ungainly, especially in the bottom left picture.
I tried it with a shorter neck (and the current one is really moderately longer than the sketch) and I didn't care for it that's why I went with the one I have presently.I think you said you made the neck a bit longer from the sketch on purpose, but looking at it with all these pics. I really think it would benefit from reducing the neck, make it more compact. It looks a bit ungainly, especially in the bottom left picture.
The design meant to precede this (yes, I'm planning on building that one) will have a much shorter dorsal between the secondary and main hulls.
When you sketch out an idea in 2D it doesn't always translate the same in 3D so then you make modifications. It happens in reverse as well in that some 3D objects drawn in 2D don't seem to look right. Part of the reason is that in 2D you lose the dimension of depth and thus perspective. I slimmed the nacelles on the model from what they were on the sketch because I felt they were coming out too thick.I tried it with a shorter neck (and the current one is really moderately longer than the sketch) and I didn't care for it that's why I went with the one I have presently.I think you said you made the neck a bit longer from the sketch on purpose, but looking at it with all these pics. I really think it would benefit from reducing the neck, make it more compact. It looks a bit ungainly, especially in the bottom left picture.
The design meant to precede this (yes, I'm planning on building that one) will have a much shorter dorsal between the secondary and main hulls.
Okay, fair enough. I often hate giving guidance to people on their designs. For I think that it often just steers them away from what they intended. However I just loved that initial sketch so much and I know when you translate to CGI often things need to be changed.
It began with playing with the concept of a MJ sketch where you see the familiar shape but with the nacelles fixed atop the saucer. I figure that was a stepping stone idea before MJ fixed them to the secondary hull. It does kind of work with my clipper design in terms of evolution. If you look at the clipper you have this long aft section extending back from the saucer and ending with the impulse section. The space warp nacelle is slung underneath. The next step (not yet modelled but I posted a sketch upthread) shortens the aft section dramatically and the impulse drive gets smaller and a lot of the support facilities go into a secondary hull slung underneath. In keeping with the impulse section also being Main Engineering the space warp nacelles stem out of the engineering/impulse section. The next step (which is my current model) makes the engineering section even more compact as the impulse drive gets smaller even as it gets more powerful due to advancing technology. Finally the impulse drive is compact enough that you can mount it right into the aft end of the saucer and most of the engineering/support goes into the secondary hull, and as an outgrowth you now mount the space warp nacelles right to the secondary hull just as we see with the Constitution-class. In a sense the nacelles fixed to the upper hull area isn't really phased out because you have the frigate designs, only those nacelles are slung underneath the main saucer body rather than above. And in a way the destroyer/scout concept is also a descendent of the clipper design because the single nacelle is slung underneath the main hull.Tallguy said:warped9, that’s some lovely modeling. But what would be the engineering hurdle that would prevent pylons from originating from the secondary hull?
Whoa, you actually like something that isn't from TOS?I like the Reliant design and the Defiant from DS9
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