From shortly before the animated series until just after Wrath of Khan, a friend and I turned our debates about TOS technologies into a manuscript entitled Scotty's Book, which I submitted to Pocket Books--who sadly responded that they didn't think our work would appeal to a large enough audience.
Our "tech manual" was presented in the form of chapters organized alphabetically on subjects from artificial gravity to warp drive. In each case, we'd applied what amounted to the scientific method to what we called "aired data" (with material from The Making of ST being referenced only where it did not violate that, with actual scientific laws coming in a distant third).
Back then, a number of what we found maddening "violations" were common in novels, one such being that shuttlecraft (despite having recognizable warp nacelles) were sublight vehicles. That view is only rarely to be found online today...but a number of other ideas persist.
Every so often, I've posted one or another of our "Star Trek heresies," to responses from "That was a mistake" to "Too long a post...didn't read." Being, perhaps, a glutton for punishment, I thought I'd put the whole lot into context before beginning discussion of a few.
To begin with artificial gravity: as Spock says in "The Slaver Weapon," "In one (Slaver stasis box) was found a flying belt which was the key to the artificial gravity field used by starships." From this line, and the limited attitudes at which Starship decks seemed to tilt, we derived the concept of gravitational prisms. A number of these could "reverse" the force of gravity. Arranged differently, such prisms could "focus" (i.e., amplify) the gravitational pull of matter lying "beneath" a Starship.
Picture a vessel "on its side" relative to the galactic disc, with tens of thousands of light years' volume of matter "underlying" it. Pitching the nose up or down will reduce this volume minimally unless the angle is quite severe. Turning right or left will leave the "focal mass" unchanged. Go nose "up" or "down," though--or bank like an airplane while turning--and the total focal mass will change quite abruptly--showing just what we see.
Encountering turbulence on first entering the galactic barrier, Kirk gives an order he never gives again: "Gravitation on automatic!" This we interpreted as meaning, "Put the gravitational prisms into 'rapid response' mode, which we don't generally due to the resulting high power requirements."
Bear in mind that each chapter was a carefully-developed and highly-referenced argument, not an "in universe" technical presentation.
This document was typed, and does not exist digitally. For the most part, I've seen few of the ideas we "derived from observation" and put on paper circa 1983 raised or discussed in this or any other forum.
Obviously, this was the work of two people. More minds make for better analysis, which is actually the real reason I'm sticking my proverbial neck out on this, the most analytic and argumentative (in a good way) of message boards. As much as I'd love feedback and critique, though, "That's not canon!" isn't what I'd consider a pertinent or useful response.
For all that Sternbach and Okuda applied "consistent" tech to TNG and after, they had to answer to higher authorities even as to Starship registry numbers (per Sternbach's comment elsewhere on this board). "Retcons" -- no matter how deeply [deep] canon based would not have been accepted, had they offered them.
We had no such limits. Fermians before our time, we took what was aired as gospel (save for "suspension of disbelief" matters like a shuttlecraft's size rivaling the Constellation's on entering the planet killer). Not only did our ideas stand up into the Voyager era...well, never mind. Suffice to say, if we'd changed the technological terminology to avoid lawsuit, "our" ships' characteristics would have been unrecognizable to the average fan (or lawyer). Nonetheless, that's how things worked, on air...stated "canon" notwithstanding.
So...anyone interested in reading a few proofs of Kirk's Enterprise being far faster than Picard's? Or what "standard orbit" really was, or why the transporter was demonstrably not simply a "matter/energy scrambler"?
Our "tech manual" was presented in the form of chapters organized alphabetically on subjects from artificial gravity to warp drive. In each case, we'd applied what amounted to the scientific method to what we called "aired data" (with material from The Making of ST being referenced only where it did not violate that, with actual scientific laws coming in a distant third).
Back then, a number of what we found maddening "violations" were common in novels, one such being that shuttlecraft (despite having recognizable warp nacelles) were sublight vehicles. That view is only rarely to be found online today...but a number of other ideas persist.
Every so often, I've posted one or another of our "Star Trek heresies," to responses from "That was a mistake" to "Too long a post...didn't read." Being, perhaps, a glutton for punishment, I thought I'd put the whole lot into context before beginning discussion of a few.
To begin with artificial gravity: as Spock says in "The Slaver Weapon," "In one (Slaver stasis box) was found a flying belt which was the key to the artificial gravity field used by starships." From this line, and the limited attitudes at which Starship decks seemed to tilt, we derived the concept of gravitational prisms. A number of these could "reverse" the force of gravity. Arranged differently, such prisms could "focus" (i.e., amplify) the gravitational pull of matter lying "beneath" a Starship.
Picture a vessel "on its side" relative to the galactic disc, with tens of thousands of light years' volume of matter "underlying" it. Pitching the nose up or down will reduce this volume minimally unless the angle is quite severe. Turning right or left will leave the "focal mass" unchanged. Go nose "up" or "down," though--or bank like an airplane while turning--and the total focal mass will change quite abruptly--showing just what we see.
Encountering turbulence on first entering the galactic barrier, Kirk gives an order he never gives again: "Gravitation on automatic!" This we interpreted as meaning, "Put the gravitational prisms into 'rapid response' mode, which we don't generally due to the resulting high power requirements."
Bear in mind that each chapter was a carefully-developed and highly-referenced argument, not an "in universe" technical presentation.
This document was typed, and does not exist digitally. For the most part, I've seen few of the ideas we "derived from observation" and put on paper circa 1983 raised or discussed in this or any other forum.
Obviously, this was the work of two people. More minds make for better analysis, which is actually the real reason I'm sticking my proverbial neck out on this, the most analytic and argumentative (in a good way) of message boards. As much as I'd love feedback and critique, though, "That's not canon!" isn't what I'd consider a pertinent or useful response.
For all that Sternbach and Okuda applied "consistent" tech to TNG and after, they had to answer to higher authorities even as to Starship registry numbers (per Sternbach's comment elsewhere on this board). "Retcons" -- no matter how deeply [deep] canon based would not have been accepted, had they offered them.
We had no such limits. Fermians before our time, we took what was aired as gospel (save for "suspension of disbelief" matters like a shuttlecraft's size rivaling the Constellation's on entering the planet killer). Not only did our ideas stand up into the Voyager era...well, never mind. Suffice to say, if we'd changed the technological terminology to avoid lawsuit, "our" ships' characteristics would have been unrecognizable to the average fan (or lawyer). Nonetheless, that's how things worked, on air...stated "canon" notwithstanding.
So...anyone interested in reading a few proofs of Kirk's Enterprise being far faster than Picard's? Or what "standard orbit" really was, or why the transporter was demonstrably not simply a "matter/energy scrambler"?