Have you been removing blueprints? I know you sometimes get request to do so.
Oh okay, btw is there any way you could send them to me? I promise not to post or share them. I am of course assuming you kept a copy privately.@Star Trek Apolgist - The only removed items are those that belonged to Joe.
Thanks for the info, also I was wondering why you did not Start With TMP since the sets from TMP till the end of Voyager are just modified off of each other.Joe is working on his online repository - I recently sent him a zip of all the removed items to help him set up the site. It should hopefully be online soon.
Also I have a small announcement to make:
I am rebooting the Galaxy Project - a complete redo from scratch. Very little of the original will be carried over.
The Galaxy Project is the oldest set of plans, and have become outdated. It was about time for a refit as:
The aim is to redo all the existing sections and expand to new sections.
- New copies of blueprints have since been found
- Better references became available
- New dimensions and information learnt from the Voyager Project
- Improvements to my camera matching, 3d modelling, and blueprinting skills etc
- My blueprint style has evolved over time
Although a significant chunk of the project is complete, there is no predicted release date yet - there is still a long way to go.
That was true for TUC a as well. The engineering section in particular bugged me.
On the whole, I would agree. I think, however, the warp core would have looked better using the later-rebuilt Voyager configuration, that used a similar intermix effect that the TMP refit had. That TNG core, with the animated red and blue neon light hoop blinkies always looked really super-cheap to me.At least they repainted it "2290s light grey" from "2360s warm beige" and used era-specific wall graphics. In Star Trek V the Enterprise-A's corridors are literally the Enterprise-D's corridors; colour scheme, carpet, LCARS-themed door labels, and all.
Honestly, I always felt that that engineering set and warp core design were better-suited to the Enterprise-A than the Enterprise-D anyway. A ship the size of the Enterprise-D but its engine room is a tiny corridor junction where civilians can just wander in at any time? Madness! The interesting thing about the warp core in TUC is that it's filmed quite cleverly. We all know that it's the Enterprise-D's warp core, sure, but pains were apparently taken to avoid showing this as overtly as it might have been. We mainly only see the blue of the matter constriction segments, in reflection while Scotty is smiling up at it when the Enterprise-A leave Spacedock, then as the camera pans over the worried faces of the engineering crew as Spock counts down the arrival to Khitomer. The one time the camera does actually focus on and pan over the core proper, during the fight with Chang, it's shot in such a way that it only shows a single plasma transfer conduit leaving it. My feeling is that, knowing they'd have to use the TNG core, they deliberately shot it in a way to suggest it's intermediate between the horizontal intermix shaft of the TMP era and the TNG-style centralised core.![]()
That TNG core, with the animated red and blue neon light hoop blinkies always looked really super-cheap to me.
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