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Single-Nacelle Ships

Off Topic Now...

I also want to do a TOS Anton at some point. It's practically the only FASA design I actually like.

Ziz is working on an Anton hull, so you won't have too long to wait for that. (He just made his own version of the Surya and Coventry). I'm a little surprised at your hostility towards the Loknar and Larson, though... though I can easily understand the antipathy to many of FASA's other designs...
 
Not hostile, I just think they're ugly. :)

Ziz is beating me to the Anton? Damn, I'm too diverse, spending time on airplane models and such.
 
I like the look of the Kelvin (much better looking ship than the new Ent), but apart from that I'd rather not see them.
 
To me, 3 nacelles seem ideal but all you need is 1. The more nacelles you get, the more your ability to warp space time (of course simple having more warp coils should have the same effect) and the more you can change your field geometry to change course (of course the field balancer does this also).

With one nacelle, you can travel at warp in a straight line but have theoretically would have to drop the field to change course. So one is enough but ideal. I don't think the Kelvin layout looks very cool either.
 
Why? The warp field doesn't provide propulsion? And there's nothing to assume that you can't vector propulsion within a nacelle, either.
 
To me, 3 nacelles seem ideal but all you need is 1. The more nacelles you get, the more your ability to warp space time (of course simple having more warp coils should have the same effect) and the more you can change your field geometry to change course (of course the field balancer does this also).

With one nacelle, you can travel at warp in a straight line but have theoretically would have to drop the field to change course. So one is enough but ideal. I don't think the Kelvin layout looks very cool either.

::facepalm::



--Alex
 
Why? The warp field doesn't provide propulsion? And there's nothing to assume that you can't vector propulsion within a nacelle, either.

The field provides propulsion similar to how lift is generated across an airfoil. The warp field compresses space time in front and expands it toward the rear. The resulting imbalance pushes the object in the center forward as the fabric of space time tries to balance itself. It is a push resulting from the difference of pressures. This isn't propulsion like from a rocket engine, yes, but how the field is balanced DOES provide propulsion. A physicist wrote a paper recently outlining that this is theoretically possible.
 
Unfortunately, by the time they actually needed it (Day of Honour) it was nowhere to be seen. Looted for spares, perhaps?
 
What about a warp-capable ship without any nacelles at all but just a saucer section that contains everything needed? Blasphemy?
 
Unfortunately, by the time they actually needed it (Day of Honour) it was nowhere to be seen. Looted for spares, perhaps?

The second core isn't exactly ready to go in a moment's notice. It takes a few days to get the sucker installed and running, and in this instance, they really didn't have a few days. Plus, the simple fact that they really couldn't let the old warp core fall into someone else's hands.
 
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