Interesting...the reflections on the glass of the central control area indicate those wall- wheel things are all over the place and the room itself is circular and enormous!
Could the weird steampunk thing be a decontamination chamber or something? If you look past that in the new image, we see what looks much more like a traditional transporter chamber.![]()
If you remove the silly steampunk "transporter" on the left, the rest of the set in the image is very interesting looking and very Trek-y.
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If you remove the silly steampunk "transporter" on the left, the rest of the set in the image is very interesting looking and very Trek-y.
I think that is EVA or Uniform closet.Could the weird steampunk thing be a decontamination chamber or something? If you look past that in the new image, we see what looks much more like a traditional transporter chamber.
Was noticing the same thing.Interesting...the reflections on the glass of the central control area indicate those wall- wheel things are all over the place and the room itself is circular and enormous!
Those cover photos are outstanding! They got my blood flowing.In the new EW photos (http://ew.com/tv/2017/07/27/star-tr...l&xid=socialflow_facebook_entertainmentweekly), it looks like the area I thought might be the actual transporter really IS the transporter. So the steampunk units? Maybe decontamination units, maybe something else.
Those cover photos are outstanding! They got my blood flowing.
ed - Uh oh, what happened to the post I quoted?
Could the weird steampunk thing be a decontamination chamber or something? ...
No, I don't see any jars of gel there to rub all over each other.Ah, the big hit of ENT returns.
Kor
Yet...No, I don't see any jars of gel there to rub all over each other.
My thinking on the decon scenes, besides unnecessary, were that they get into a chamber, grab jars (which now are contaminated by the contact), and rub it on each other.The decon scenes didn't make sense!
For the gel to effectively contact all areas of the epidermis, the characters should have been totally naked rather than half-dressed.
Kor
I agree, but while hoses and soap work well enough for scrubbing away radioactive contaminants, we also have to include possible biological contaminants that might be inhaled, ingested, or find other ways into the body of a hapless crewman. So in addition to standing naked under some kind of fluid bath, there should probably be something inhaled and ingested! Setting aside the obvious frat party implications, there should also be different levels of quarantine protocol for all returning landing party members, ranging from twenty-four to seventy-two hours depending on the kinds of contact involved in the mission. Done realistically, there should have been isolation provided for returning crew from the shuttlepod hangar to sickbay -- a whole section of the ship intended to process the isolated for the appropriate duration, along with access to sickbay should symptoms develop. Failing that, returning crew should have immediately donned isolation suits intended to minimize contact with other crew until they could make it to decon.My thinking on the decon scenes, besides unnecessary, were that they get into a chamber, grab jars (which now are contaminated by the contact), and rub it on each other.
Wouldn't it have been more efficient for the landing party to enter the chamber and have the decon applied via some spray or mist? Jesus, Bond and Honey were rinsed of radioactivity by hoses and soap in 1962! It was clumsy and excessive to have a decon chamber with rubbing gel.
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