I wish you all would stop using the Richter-Enterprise as a reference.
Will very nicely built, it is nowhere near accurate.
Is there an accurate one?I wish you all would stop using the Richter-Enterprise as a reference.
Will very nicely built, it is nowhere near accurate.
Is there an accurate one?I wish you all would stop using the Richter-Enterprise as a reference.
Will very nicely built, it is nowhere near accurate.
It seems clear to me that whoever designed the exterior of the Enterprise, with the window placements and bridge structure, was assuming it was around the same size as the original Enterprise, but whoever designed the shuttlebay was thinking it was much bigger.
The important thing, at least to me, is that when I was watching the movie it didn't seem to be ridiculously huge. I was not sitting there thinking "Why did they make the ship so damn big?". Except for the rather silly interior shots of the brewery with the towering ceilings that replaced engineering, the ship's scale seemed right at the time.
Here's a theory I came up with: LINK
(thought it'd be a waste to repost)
I wish you all would stop using the Richter-Enterprise as a reference.
Will very nicely built, it is nowhere near accurate.
I wish you all would stop using the Richter-Enterprise as a reference.
Will very nicely built, it is nowhere near accurate.
I can't believe this discussion is still raging. What happened to the cease fire several pages back?!![]()
I can't believe this discussion is still raging. What happened to the cease fire several pages back?!![]()
Hell, as far as I'm concerned, DiSiLLUSiON's post a zillion pages back was the end of the matter. This is all just noise.![]()
I don't think any amount of analysis even really matters at this moment, considering that it looks like we were presented with a differently scaled Enterprise based on the shots...I'll wait for the manualI watched the movie last night, and the one thing I decided last night is that I really enjoyed the movie, and honestly was not all that concerned about how big the E supposedly was.
A 700-something meter or 900-something meter length doesn't match the viewscreen width.
Please explain why you think it doesn't match
The view screen is 28+ feet at 725 meters. At 900 meters the viewscreen would be 35+ feet. My living room is 30 feet long; I can tell you, that veiwscreen, as presented in the movie isn't 28+ feet in length. If they wanted the ship to be that long, then the viewscreen/window on the front of the saucer should be smaller to match the bridge set.
The view screen is 28+ feet at 725 meters. At 900 meters the viewscreen would be 35+ feet. My living room is 30 feet long; I can tell you, that veiwscreen, as presented in the movie isn't 28+ feet in length. If they wanted the ship to be that long, then the viewscreen/window on the front of the saucer should be smaller to match the bridge set.
There's measurements from the set posted somewhere back in the dark recesses of this thread--I believe by Squiggy. Get ready for it:
The viewscreen on the set was 26' wide.
I can't believe this discussion is still raging. What happened to the cease fire several pages back?!![]()
I don't think any amount of analysis even really matters at this moment, considering that it looks like we were presented with a differently scaled Enterprise based on the shots...I'll wait for the manualI watched the movie last night, and the one thing I decided last night is that I really enjoyed the movie, and honestly was not all that concerned about how big the E supposedly was.
Indeed. The manual authors, whoever they will be, will be able to pester the ILM guys a lot more effectively than we can, and will necessarily pin them down if the models and set diagrams don't match.
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