It’s too famous to be wrong.
In other words...you don't have a citeable source that this is in fact why Paramount filed patents. You are assuming based on your reading of the law. Thanks.Because I did the exact same research anyone would do. How do you protect a starship design? Copyright? Nope, covers buildings and maybe some ships, but not spaceships. Definitely not fictional space ships. Trademark? Nope, Not really what trademarks are for. Patent? Bingo, just what you need. You can do the research yourself if you care to. But a patent ensures that no one can make anything close to your design. It is the oddity of US IP laws. And they are too voluminous to cite each point that leads to this conclusion.
But the proof really lies in all the things they patented related to Star Trek. Memory Alpha has a whole page dedicated to it. https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Star_Trek_design_patents
But as for the question of why Patents, the answer lies in US IP law. That is the only way to protect some IP. Anything that would be manufactured. Case in point, there were 2 TOS Enterprises, 3 TMP Enterprises, 2 TOS D-7's, 1 larger TMP Klingon ship, at least 2 Reliants, 2 Excelsior, 3 Ent D. Many phaser props, costumes, tricorders, communicators, etc. All items that were "manufactured" for the movie and TV productions. And the TMP font. Everything post TOS was patented (except Grissom it seems). The why seems clear when you understand how US IP laws work. It really isn't a wild guess, but more like Spock's guess for that elusive piece of the time travel formula in TVH - based in the available facts.
I can only help you so far in that regards. I am only planning on going as far as the cross section. The details of each deck are not part of the scope of what I am doing. And the cross section only applies because it includes a number of details important to the exterior and that the internal layout makes sense for a 467 scale exterior.Jesus, has this thread moved into an episode of Law & Order SVU or something? Who fucking cares about patents? I want more deck plans!
Yup, there is only one reason for Paramount to file those patents. It is not really an assumption but an educated guess. If you can come up with another reason for them to file patents, by all means share. I don't think another reason exists.In other words...you don't have a citeable source that this is in fact why Paramount filed patents. You are assuming based on your reading of the law. Thanks.
I'm not sure why Maurice cares if it is the logical reason vs. having documented proof it is the reason. Logical works for me. It is better than he hearsay and rumors we sometimes get for things that later prove to be wrong.Jesus, has this thread moved into an episode of Law & Order SVU or something? Who fucking cares about patents? I want more deck plans!
For the 467 length, the windows are about 80% the size of the TMP Enterprise. So about 20 inches in height instead of 24. Using a 543 length (which I think fits better but isn't canon) they would be roughly the same size.Had anyone given thought to window size? On a 467m Excelsior, I'm pretty sure they'd be postage stamp size.
Windows are points of weakness in a ship's hull, either when it comes to random space garbage or full-on kinetic combat. The designers of Excelsior took this account and made them smaller. Not a problem in-universe or IRL and totally plausible.For the 467 length, the windows are about 80% the size of the TMP Enterprise. So about 20 inches in height instead of 24. Using a 543 length (which I think fits better but isn't canon) they would be roughly the same size.
So hardly postage size, though a bit smaller.
I don't believe that it's been canonically established that this is so in the Star Trek universe.Windows are points of weakness in a ship's hull, either when it comes to random space garbage or full-on kinetic combat. The designers of Excelsior took this account and made them smaller. Not a problem in-universe or IRL and totally plausible.![]()
Any time you have a change of materials in the hull, it can result in a weakness. It does not mean the materials are weaker, only that the complete change from one material to another causes a design weakness. So smaller is better. Size and shape can impact that, as can other design factors. We only have the materials detailed for the Galaxy Class in the TNG Tech Manual. We can assume that the materials were similarly state of the art for the TMP era and the TOS era. TOS had larger square windows. This would be a weaker design, but other factors such as hull material could mitigate that and specific hull layers and unseen structure. TMP features a new hull type (white and apparently unpainted vs. the TOS Gray) which might have different design requirements. In TNG we get a wide variety of windows from round to long to square. Some of these are likely design aesthetics and some are engineering necessities. It all depends on what is needed and wanted in the design.I don't believe that it's been canonically established that this is so in the Star Trek universe.
"Transparent aluminum" was a topic in TVH, but whatever its specific properties were, that wasn't a subject. Nevertheless, I took the implication to be that it was far less destructible than at least ordinary glass. Whether it was as strong etc. as other nontransparent metals or had properties besides its transparency basically similar to aluminum, those are open questions. I think it's reasonable to assume that future iterations of transparent aluminum were made to be even stronger than the first, and that down the line other transparent alloys were discovered as a result of studying it.
I'm not up on Trek tech metals, but I know there are supposedly super-strong alloys that starship hulls are made out of, with strengths supposedly far beyond real world metals. Whether the same applies to transparent hull material, I don't know, but I don't see any reason to assume such material isn't also super-strong, possibly even to the point of being on par with the nontransparent hull material.
Canonically, the Kelvin was a Prime Universe design that incorporated transparent material on the bridge itself, so that's a point in favor of the idea, that at least canonically (and regardless of whatever your opinions are of nuTrek), windows aren't per se a hull weakness.
I'm not persuaded for the increase in size of any of the designs because the existing ones are quite large to begin with. Most people can't really conceived how large these starship designs are and what a massive volume they have.I was pretty persuaded by the arguments for a 600m Excelsior - but then I also think the TOS-E works better at around 450m.
Precisely this.Any time you have a change of materials in the hull, it can result in a weakness. It does not mean the materials are weaker, only that the complete change from one material to another causes a design weakness. So smaller is better. Size and shape can impact that, as can other design factors. We only have the materials detailed for the Galaxy Class in the TNG Tech Manual. We can assume that the materials were similarly state of the art for the TMP era and the TOS era. TOS had larger square windows. This would be a weaker design, but other factors such as hull material could mitigate that and specific hull layers and unseen structure. TMP features a new hull type (white and apparently unpainted vs. the TOS Gray) which might have different design requirements. In TNG we get a wide variety of windows from round to long to square. Some of these are likely design aesthetics and some are engineering necessities. It all depends on what is needed and wanted in the design.
By that logic, if that's all there is to it, then the deflector dish represents a weakness in the hull that is far more critical than that that results from any window.Any time you have a change of materials in the hull, it can result in a weakness. It does not mean the materials are weaker, only that the complete change from one material to another causes a design weakness. So smaller is better.
Except that the dish is an apparatus attached to the hull, not the hull itselfBy that logic, if that's all there is to it, then the deflector dish represents a weakness in the hull that is far more critical than that that results from any window.![]()
This. I wish we could all just agree that Gene Roddenberry was just wrong to suggest the TOS-E was 300ish metres long. Wasn't it just written in pre-production notes? Since it's never been stated on screen, all it will take is a current writer to canonize its actual length of 450m! (sounds like a plan for Strange New Worlds).I was pretty persuaded by the arguments for a 600m Excelsior - but then I also think the TOS-E works better at around 450m.
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