-And everyone's favorite: the decon chamber being used to screen out bad stuff rather than just doing it the easy way, with the transporter.
I suppose they'd be electric doors, and probably have the problem you have with them now, either they lock, or unlock when the power goes out.I never understood the obsession with automatic doors on science fiction shows, particularly in Star Trek. Doors really aren't a lot of effort to use, and I'd think that having doors you didn't have to use a special gadget to squeeze open when the power goes out might be a plus.
First rule of government spending. Why build one when you can build two for double the price?
One thing that I've never understood is starfighters in capital ship combat in Star Wars. Besides smashing into the bridge of a ship or destroying the power core of a moon sized space station what good can they do against capital ships?
I can understand it in Battlestar Galactica since the ships don't have shields and fighters could do some major damage, but are Star Wars starfighters some how able to bypass shields on capital ships?
The Death Star. I can see the budget meeting now:
PALPY: "With this superweapon we will be able to destroy any planet that harbours those Rebel sc-"
ADVISER: "Er, your Emperorness, wouldn't it be easier and cheaper to just load an old freighter with heavy junk, point it at the planet, and switch the hyperdrive on?"
PALPY: "What?"
ADVISER: "Well, a few thousand tons of mass moving at relativistic speed-"
PALPY: "Oh fuck off. I've wanted a Death Star since I was a Senator, and it's coming out of your paycheck, OK?"
As others have said... The box shape is utilitarian. Practical. And sensible for a craft that is designed to spend most of its time in space.
Oh please. All complex engineering is an exercise in compromises and trade-offs. Any vehicle (or complex machine) that experiences vastly different environments are designed with trade offs. Optimize too much for one, and the other suffer. You really ought to know that.As others have said... The box shape is utilitarian. Practical. And sensible for a craft that is designed to spend most of its time in space.
No, it really, really isn't. For one thing, "most" isn't "all." If traveling through atmosphere is a part of the vessel's function AT ALL, then it needs to be designed with that capability in mind. Just as a jet plane needs to be designed with wheels and the capability to maneuver on a runway. A competent design has to account for ALL the functions that the craft regularly performs, regardless of how much time it spends doing them.
Yeah because space is just such a benign environment in Star Trek.After all, entry, descent, and landing are by far the most critical and dangerous part of any spacecraft's operations; there are far more things that can go wrong in those phases than could ever go wrong in the nice, simple, weightless and airless environment of space.
For another thing, a boxy design is not a sensible one for a spacecraft -- far from it. A pressurized spacecraft ideally has a shape that conforms to a membrane under tension, such as a cylinder or a spheroid. A box shape is a terrible design for a pressurized vessel, since the pressure would be concentrated at the seams and make ruptures very probable. Look at any design that has to deal with unequal pressures: a submarine, a scuba tank, a fire extinguisher, an Apollo capsule, a Soyuz capsule, the International Space Station. Are they boxy? No, they're based on cylinders and curves.
I mean, our space ships now aren't aerodynamic. The space shuttle drops like a brick to land, it doesn't glide or generate any kind of lift. Its wings are there just there to have landing flaps to raise the nose up
Given that the Trek universe clearly has A) strong enough materials in common use, a square shape is not a concern for such a small craft. And B) it has enough power to fly. So while it is a far from perfect atmospheric vehicle, why exactly are you making such a big deal about it?
Well they are mainly designed to fly in space. I would guess that when they do fly in the atmosphere impulse engines are powerful enough that lift isn't required for them to fly.Futuristic aircraft that don't have aerodynamic shapes, like Starfleet shuttlecraft. Why should our understanding of aerodynamics regress?
But that doesn't make sense. A craft that's designed to be aerodynamic will work just fine in space, but a craft that isn't aerodynamic won't even be capable of functioning in atmosphere. This is why, as someone pointed out above, the Space Shuttle is aerodynamically shaped. Any craft that's designed with atmospheric entry and maneuvering in mind as even part of its function would have to be designed with aerodynamics in mind.
And relying on "powerful impulse engines" is incompetent engineering. Mr. Murphy was an engineer, and Murphy's Law is a basic principle of good engineering design: if your design allows for something to go wrong, then it will go wrong. If you design a shuttlecraft that depends entirely on powerful engines or shaped forcefields to keep from crashing, it's going to crash big-time whenever there's a power failure. That's inept design. You want a design that can still function as a glider and give you the chance to get the engines going again or glide to a safe landing (remember, the Space Shuttle's landings are entirely unpowered).
I totally agree. You can see that in Starship design also, some of the later Starfleet ship designs like the Sovereign class are more curved and sleek then the earlier ships.And the shuttlepods on Enterprise. That's a function of improving budgets and construction techniques. It's costlier and more complex to build a shuttle mockup with curved, aerodynamic contours than it is just to nail a bunch of flat wooden boards together and cover it in paint. If you look at Matt Jefferies' prototype designs for the shuttlecraft, they were much more aerodynamic, but it just wasn't practical to build them on a TV budget. These days, there are probably fabrication techniques that make it easier to produce curved shapes, like vacuforming of fiberglas or something.Of course some of the later shuttles like the Delta Flyer and the shuttles on the Enterprise E did look more aerodynamic then many of the earlier shuttles.
I never understood the obsession with automatic doors on science fiction shows, particularly in Star Trek.
I'm going to have to go with "The 3 Seashells" from Demolition Man.
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