I just thought of it as a design exercise. As I said before when I thought of it I was trying to think of a TOS equivalent to the TAS shuttlecraft we saw in "Slaver Weapon." There was no way TOS could have done something like that--particularly given the apparent size--so I tried to envision something not far off from what they already had.As to your shuttle variant, I don't get the rationale for it. What does moving the nacelles back and rearranging the landing pads do other than make the ship take up more room in the hangar? Just to make a different ship they could have used on the show?
I'm not sure about the seams. Just as it's obvious the support braces (under the stabilizers) were there to strengthen the mockup the seams are so obvious were the stabilizers attached to the main hull. On a real craft I just don't think they'd be so obvious or if you would even see them unless really up close.As you continue to add detail, you may want to include seams along the inner winglet where it runs along the main fuselage, as seen in "The Galileo Seven". (Unless you're applying artistic license there.)
No. And I don't know if they will be even after the model's release just as his TOS E drawings aren't out there either.Are Gary Kerr's drawings / research for the Galileo available anywhere online ?
It was opened and used in its very first appearance in "The Galileo Seven."I can't remember, was that panel functional from the very beginning, or was it maybe modified later for the actors to be able to use it?
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