Those shapes are there in the earliest concept drawings of the shuttle - that is, once TPTB realized they could not afford a shape other than simple shoebox. Probably a sort of "we can't do wings on this budget but these are their futuristic equivalent" thing.
Hadn't though of that, but that might be exactly what it is. Like a picatinny rail on a gun, or the clamps that mount a cargo container to a flat bed.Because every great utility vehicle has a roof rack option.
"The ones on the bottom the same deal. The shuttle could take off, land on top of a cargo container, grab on, and take off again."
That sketch is much sexier than the craft we got. The proportions are much better.Those shapes are there in the earliest concept drawings of the shuttle - that is, once TPTB realized they could not afford a shape other than simple shoebox. Probably a sort of "we can't do wings on this budget but these are their futuristic equivalent" thing.![]()
That's probably the basic explanation. The curved extensions of the hull sides make a simple, boxy craft a little less boxy, and they look as if they could have some sort of aerodynamic function for atmospheric flight.
I just wondered today how they moved the cargo containers for Khan & company down to Ceti Alpha V
That sketch is much sexier than the craft we got. The proportions are much better.
Unlikely as it seems, they might have been flown down in the configuration we saw used for space maneuvering, with a flimsy "spine" connecting the pods and with a workbee clamped at the bow.I just wondered today how they moved the cargo containers for Khan & company down to Ceti Alpha V
That is, the set was built with the "spine" in place, up to and including the mounting for the (missing) workbee!
It does stretch credibility, though, that the "workbee train" would be capable of such feats. So perhaps we should once again politely but firmly ignore author intent and decide that the bunch of six containers (or, rather, three double-width ones) was beamed down with a cargo transporter, but with the "train" system attached for some unknown reason. Perhaps it distributes power to the containers, and was considered handier than a bunch of cables in that task even planetside? Or perhaps its supposedly feeble maneuvering thrusters can still move the containers across short distances, and Kirk decided to give Khan the option of relocating his camp later.
We are probably supposed to ignore the fact that Khan's containers are slightly larger than the ones seen in ST:TMP. Perhaps the greater interior height can be explained by Khan kicking out the bottom plates and digging pits in the ground, then placing the bottomless containers over the pits (a fairly standard way to build huts in general)?
A dedicated cargo shuttle would probably be a wholly enclosed craft, not placing the "rolling door" corrugated surfaces at the mercy of the elements during atmospheric flight...
Timo Saloniemi
I don't buy the idea of the edges being used as hitches or grapple structures. I like it, but I don't buy it.
The curved edges are too subtle for such a purpose.
If they were real rail-like structures for mounting uses, I think they'd be more pronounced, more substantial, more solid.
As they are, they do seem more like an airfoil or aerodynamic feature rather than a grapple rail of some kind.
It seems the structures seen in Star Trek II came, not from the Enterprise (any version), but from the Botany Bay itself.
That was how Chekov realized who they'd encounter if they didn't get out of there fast. He saw what looked like a seatbelt with the words "Botany Bay" on the buckle.
Maybe it's the equivalent of something like this?. . . But, why would the Botany Bay have labeled belt buckles anyway?
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