Shaw, you are being unnecessarily touchy about this. Speculating about these things is not disrespecting the people who made the show. I do realise that for a TV show set in a fictional universe Star Trek was surprisingly consistent, and a lot of work was put in to achieving that. I also do understand why minor inconsistencies crop up in any production. Noticing them is not showing disrespect to Jefferies or anyone else.
There isn't anything emotional (if that is how you were using
touchy) about any of this for me. But when you take things that were done because of the constraints of the day and try to construct a
Rosette Stone of scale based on them (to the exclusion of all of the elements that were intended to be used) you end up with pointless results.
Not that it matters here... no one is willing to put forward any amount of
intellectual exercise in support of anything they are saying, so being mistaken isn't much of a hardship.
Other than trying to point out the obvious, I really don't care what anyone thinks... If people agree or disagree, makes no difference in my daily life. I figure it is really more your loss if you disregard my helpful advice.
I further do not get why the exact length of the ship is such a big deal, and why disregarding the length given is "throwing away everything."
The overall length isn't a big deal as the models are made up of 4 unique parts and weren't assembled to match the length properly. I get about 943 ft from my figures of the 11 foot model.
But what you guys are doing in focusing in on the shortcomings and conceits of production, outright avoiding the obvious (and purposely placed) clues, is to draw bizarre conclusions. If that was your goal, you guys have done a first rate job!
BTW, if we apply same logic to Excelsior MSD than we do to that Connie & D7 schematic (i.e. accept details not visible on screen, that nevertheless were there), then Excelsior is indeed about 700 metres long. How about that!
MSD aren't supposed to be accurate, they don't come with a scale, they are a generalized informational display.
Are you saying you don't know (or understand) the difference?
I've not studied the Excelsior, I've have no idea how it was designed or how (or when) the original scale was arrived at. So you can try to make all the comparisons you want between TOS and any other Trek... but I'll nail you guys down on the facts about TOS if you get them wrong. Someone else will have to step forward for the other production as I've never spent any serious time studying them.
The Jefferies scale in that 1968 diagram hadn't changed since November of 1964. It wasn't included haphazardly.
BTW, I was looking several TOS Connie blueprints, and they don't seem to agree with each other quite often. Especially the shape of secondary hull seem to vary a lot. Which are most accurate blueprints? Sinclair's? How about the refit, what are the most accurate blueprints (various refit blueprints seem to at least be much more consistent than the TOS-E ones.)
I use my drawings based on my studies of the models. I try to avoid other people's drawings as I'm trying to see all this stuff for myself rather than someone else's interpretation.
If you want the best publicly available plans of the 11 foot model, those would be
Casimiro's in my opinion. Kerr's are the best, but aren't for public distribution.
But there isn't just one Enterprise in TOS. There were two models (33 inch and 11 foot) and they were both based on
Jefferies' original plans (though parts of the 33 inch model were started before those plans were finished).
Which Enterprise are you interested in?
Also, in TOS, the Enterprise is a Starship Class... the name Constitution is from one of the small displays that
REALLY wasn't visible on screen (much less than full frame for everyone to see).
Just FYI.
