The paired set of cargo doors and their side placement avoid the warp drive conduits that come together in the center.
TOS force field doors… hmmm!
Never heard the storage unit story before. I do agree with Probert though; I always thought they looked a bit odd.
The paired set of cargo doors and their side placement avoid the warp drive conduits that come together in the center.
TOS force field doors… hmmm!
Never heard the storage unit story before. I do agree with Probert though; I always thought they looked a bit odd.
I rescaled the ship because if the shuttlecraft really is 24 feet long (said by Kirk onscreen in an episode, which is canon as you can get) and not 21 feet long (the length of the 3/4-scale real world studio prop, which is also the size that the model was created at) then it throws off the scale of everything else in the hangar deck. I’m not gonna repeat the whole math exercise I did earlier, but scaling up the hangar by a factor of 24÷21 makes things a bit more roomy. And no, the previous hangar model did not fit in the secondary hull without putting the wall (where the cargo doors are located) way in front of where the warp nacelle pylons enter the hull.
I agree, it makes no sense to have glass doors (or even force field doors) if shuttles regularly blast off. Perhaps we should just ignore that previous video of mine showing the Galileo II hovering and then jetting off; maybe shuttles are catapulted off the ship. As for Decker though, I think we can agree that him stealing a shuttlecraft was beyond the pale; anything that he did during that escape would be something extraordinary.
For @blssdwlf
I'm going to move the pair of conduits to the front side of each pylon to give the observation deck a little more room. But as you can see, even with shortening the geometric length of the hangar deck the pylons still intrude a bit into the volume of space taken up by the flight deck. (Before I did the shortening, the back wall of the flight deck was just about even with the leading edge of each warp nacelle pylon.)
View attachment 23396
I always assumed the larger, darker panels on the engineering hull around the pylon and neck connections (and the deflector dish) represented that those areas were reinforced somehow compared to the rest of the hull. Since that detail isn't on the TOS version, you could also interpret the new support system being something added during the rebuild.The pylons on the TMP refit didn't seem to need long spars leading deep into the secondary hull, as evidenced by the huge open shuttle & cargo bays.
Presumably the TOS Enterprise utilised the same futuristic attachment system
That was a rhetorical question.Because the back wall looks very plain without it.
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