>none of which made any impression on America, I guess..
Not the way Voyager presents it.
More how normal LA looked given a war with whole populations wiped out.
Exactly. But by implication ("Seed"), the Eugenics Wars were Eurasian (lucky us).
>I've seen a depiction somewhere of the SS Botany Bay ascending in all it's dynamically imbalanced glory on that 6-pack of over-sized SRB's. It featured the ship generating an EM aeroshield
Yeah, I've seen that too...a clever (?) to rationalize an image ("conjectural," when presented in the Okudas' ST Chronology book) and the resultant "canonized" model and photo (former seen in Rain Robinson's 1996 office in V'ger's "Future's End" 2-parter).
After visiting the Smithsonian's Trek exhibit in...hey! 1992-93, the years of Khan's ascendancy! and seeing the Botany Bay in person, I wrote an (unpublished) fanzine about it and ST's late 20th century. I laid the thing out: 2 columns of text with inserted imagery, a foldout, more...as a saddle-stapled (magazine style) mockup (which I still have). BUT: wanting more than simple line drawing style blueprints (which I'd be doing soon...), I set it aside.
During a summer's Architectural Rendering class, I drafted the BB at approximately studio scale, my only references being freeze-framed videos and a few convention-bought photos the size of my palm (and of course my Smithsonian pix...but they had it hanging from the ceiling). Years later, having eyeballed the ship's size from its flying alongside the Enterprise (I didn't...and still don't...know the math to scale such images accurately), I I discovered I'd gotten her size right to a fraction of an inch ("Age and wisdom will sometimes rival youth and skill").
Back to Deep Canon. Who used the Botany Bay? The most powerful Eurasian tyrant. What was it? A modified DY-100 class, not designed nor intended for use as a sleeper ship. Who then would have built those? The Soviets. For what purpose?
Here I got...just a little funny in the head. As it happened, the first real information about the Soviet manned moon landing program was out by then. I therefore took their "Saturn-ski" booster, the N-1
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/N1_(r...d_at_the_Baikonur_Cosmodrome_in_late_1967.jpg
and imagined eight of its first and second stages wrapped about a hexagonal shroud slanting outward from a DY-100's 16 modules (above which a slab-sided cone rose to where the nosecone's curve begins). Inside that nosecone I put an Estes Mars Lander
https://www.apogeerockets.com/Rocket_Kits/Skill_Level_4_Kits/Mars_Lander
(distorted, but not "redesigned," to fit the space) which doubled as a single-stage reusable lander once its time as a 100-odd-seat crew escape capsule was over.
I then massed "my" DY-100 via volume calculation and weight-per-cubic of the Soviets' Salyut space stations.
Beneath the DY, inside the ring of N-1 boosters, lay a Sovietized version of Krafft Ehricke's Nexus SSTO design of 1964:
https://www.up-ship.com/eAPR/ev3n1.htm
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Dynamics_Nexus
https://up-ship.com/blog/?p=7786
which I figured (in the TOS timeline, in which nuke bombs had flown in '68) the Soviets could pull off by--was it the late 1980s I posited? I think so.
Finally, knowing the mass, thrust, and burn times of the N-1 stages and "my" Nexus-ski -- but not knowing calculus -- I rough-calculated the boosters' performance in five-second increments, changing the gross mass from the start of one period to the next, and using Velocity = acceleration x time to (roughly) derive the final velocity.
Which was that of interplanetary injection. I'd "designed" a 300-odd-foot long modular manned interplanetary spaceship...Deep Canon's DY-100.