Made me think of the Vengeance for STID...I was thinking Mars Attacks!![]()
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Made me think of the Vengeance for STID...I was thinking Mars Attacks!![]()
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Well, they were. Fortunately, I discovered a quick and dirty fix, and it's the same thing I had to do years ago with my old LightWave Enterprise when light leaks started materializing: I made the material in that area of the ship double-sided. Problem solved.Weird - I thought they were just part of the aztec pattern on the hull. So the rectangular sections on those saucer edge windows are really being rendered as slightly translucent?
I agree. A little shiny goes a long way. The two main offenders were the support arms and the rotating "power modules". I changed the support arms from a mirror-like chrome to a brushed aluminum finish, but I kept the copper toruses (tori? Really? dumb plural) on the power modules because that was a key design feature of the WNMHGB phaser rifle. The power module housing (which had a mirror-smooth gold finish) was reskinned to a more muted titanium casing.I think the metal is a tad shiny though and seemed out of place. Phaser sound and beam color is great! (And I just like replaying the video for the camera zoom in)
The "signage" is a hoot! "Risk is our business" and "Beware Romulans bearing gifts"? Somebody's getting a bit cheeky!
At 2.4 meters in length they’re too long to fit through the doors if they’re lowered while pitched at an angle less than 65°. Sure, I could shorten the cannons to the length of that dinky mini-***** hanging off the lower sensor dome, but I don’t want the Klingons making snide remarks about our starship's... er... manhood. (Besides, whether the cannon is stored horizontally or vertically it takes up the same amount of volume either way...!)@Professor Moriarty Although the current iteration is fun to watch, it probably makes more sense from a space-saving point of view if they stored in the forward facing position.
Make bigger doors.At 2.4 meters in length they’re too long to fit through the doors if they’re lowered while pitched at an angle less than 65°.
But you would need a much smaller armature because your vertical translation wouldn't be as much. If, in the stored position, the business end was elevated so that the phaser was flush* with the curve of the hull then the whole assembly would store in a nice compact triangle. The vertical translation would be a third or less of the current setup and the business end would only have to drop a bit to be in the forward firing position.Besides, whether the cannon is stored horizontally or vertically it takes up the same amount of volume either way...!
I was actually thinking 3/4 through a bicep curl (to draw on your analogy) but if there are constraints to that idea then obviously it won't work.ETA #2: oh wait, I didn’t get what you were saying but now I do. To visualize it on a human being, you’re suggesting that I fold my forearm up so that it is parallel to my upper arm. For this arrangement, the forearm would be the phaser cannon, and the upper arm would be the brushed aluminum support armature. Yeah, that probably would take less vertical space.
Oh, that's nice. I like this idea, and as others have noted, a bit of a submarine feel. I can definitely see that as part of the tense back and forth like submarine films. "Outer doors opening."YouTube, if you must:
From "The Galielo Seven":Hiya... Does anyone have a closeup of the printing to the right and aft-ward of the port-side doors on the restored shuttlecraft Galileo prop on display at Space Center Houston? For that matter, does anyone have a closeup on the detail underneath the port "wing"? I've circled the areas of interest below... any assistance will be greatly appreciated!
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