I don't know, the simple fact of the matter is, hammocks are not used on naval ships today, not even submarines where space is very much at a premium, so why would they be used in the 24th century?
The Intrepid class Bellerophon apparently includes the non-standard kitchen that Neelix personally installed on Voyager by taking over the Captain's Dining Room.
just one more thing i like about the man.Nah, Trump just orders a family sized bucket from KFC.
Chakotay was always a bit of a dick to Tom.There was a Voyager episode where Red Alert was called while Tom Paris was in the holodeck running a 1960s garage program, meaning he had to go to the bridge wearing mechanic's coveralls. Chakotay chewed him out for this.
What if they were made from a shiny silver material??Hammocks don't appear very futuristic or sci-fi. Although I could see hammocks working on screen as the OP describes on BSG or a grittier show than Trek.
If we are to believe that in StarTrek we have the PA's the small combat ships that was mentioned in a post some years ago, then I'd like to throw in another idea. Why would a combat ship need a "bed"? Though we have bunks for the sailors on every naval vessel to date, in the old days of steam and sail, the beds were just hammocks strung across a room for the crew to sleep.
In a combat ship, getting out of bed half naked, and trying to put on your clothes when the enemy is attack is kind of a bad idea,
Which is of course at odds with what we see on screen. Which isn't unusual for TMOST.Here's how food aboard starships is done, according to The Making of Star Trek:
The food preparation galley is also highly automated. No chefs in white hats here. . . The art of cooking today will be translated into computer programming in the future. Although there may be ten thousand "best ways" to make a certain type of sauce, a computer can record and duplicate each more efficiently than a dozen chefs. You simply program the computer and a mechanical unit makes it. The enormous sophistication of computers aboard the Enterprise makes possible the producing of the thousand best menus of the thousand best restaurants in all the alien planets of the Federation. Crew members can select an infinite variety of food -- they simply press the button. From the central food preparation area, the selection is transferred via a small turbo-lift that connects the several dining and recreation areas scattered throughout the ship.
. . . In order to support this food preparation capability, the Enterprise has extensive food storage areas with preservation techniques that maintain food in "garden-fresh condition" over extended periods of time. Hydroponic food growing is not necessary and would use a disproportionate amount of manpower. There are, of course, hydroponics tanks aboard that are part of the botany laboratories. There is also a section where crew members can prepare individual dishes if they wish -- an activity that comes under the heading of "recreation."
So, no chefs. Also, no replicators in the TOS era. Those wall slots are just part of what's basically a dumbwaiter system.
Charlie X said:CHEF [OC]: Captain Kirk from ship's Galley.
KIRK: Kirk here.
CHEF [OC]: Sir, I put meat loaf in the ovens. There's turkeys in there now. Real turkeys.
KIRK: Chief, have you been
As others have said, there's evidence either way. So whichever you choose for your story, you can back it up.Im doing a Star Trek story, but i was wondering about this. IN all of the Star Trek episodes, especiall TOS the crew eat resenquensed food that look like foam jjnsulation, and in the movie "Undiscovered Country" you have actual chefs preparing a turkey, so betweenwhat years did the fleet go from foam food to real food?
If you think about it, the "mechanical unit makes it" must happen at a absolute blurr. Which wouldn't necessarily be impossible.You simply program the computer and a mechanical unit makes it.
If the food prep mech were on deck eight, then the distance to dining areas in the middle part of the saucer (decks five through eight) would be sixty odd feet. The outer rim of the saucer would be two hundred feet.From the central food preparation area, the selection is transferred via a small turbo-lift
Strictly from a engineering point of view they're fine.Small turbolift dumbwaiters make no sense from an engineering design standpoint.
All over the place might be an exaggeration.We should have seen those tubes all over the place
The tubes would be capable of being closed (small pressure doors), just like the corridors, jefferies tubes, air ducts, water lines, the big turbolifts, etc.such tubes would pose a problem if the deck needed sealed off atmospherically
Saucer and engineering would have completely separate facilities.Plus matching such small shafts between stardrive and saucer before /after separation would be a nightmare
Behind each food slot would be it's own full-up transporter mech? To move a tray sixty feet?Better idea that said dumbwaiters were via transporter technology and beamed from the central processing area to the appropriate food slot.
They use bunks.Don't combat ships from the 20th and 21st centuries have bunks or are they still sleeping in hammocks?
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