It might be worthwhile to try to get David Shaw to comment on this. He's the guy who provided me with the set plans, and I know he's done significant work regarding them.I've heard about the "Mcmaster is bigger" notion but I've not been able to find out why. Admittedly the set plan sketch is a little off in a few respects but assuming that the circles which made up the bridge are correct, and assuming that the corridors are about 8’ wide we get the following result:
(for accuracy, all measurements taken from centre of bridge to centre of turbolift)
Setplan: 20’6” –- 21’2”
(the variance is present due to where you measure the corridor width. I admit it's also based on the two assumptions I made earlier, which is not ideal)
On average, the distance is 20’10”
Looking at Mcmaster, the centre-centre distance is anything but consistent! I got different results depending on whether I looked at the top view, side view, metric or imperial!
Side view, imperial: 20’8”
Side view, metric: 634cm (20’10”)
Top view, imperial: 21’11”
Top view, metric: 632cm (20’9”)
(I’ve rounded off the fractions for ease of comparison)
The interesting thing is how similar the figures are to the setplan sketch.
Clearly other people have got different results – I just can’t see how! (and I do want to be as accurate as possible)
True enough. Actually, the differences aren't too much of a problem (give or take an inch is hardly going to break the bank, after all!), it's the "14% bigger" quote from Shaw that I'm having trouble reconciling, espcially if it applied to the side views (it would made for some short doors!)...I can attribute that to the fact that these were all done by hand, on velum, long before CAD even existed. Given that, it's not surprising that there were minor differences... that's the problem with trying to represent 3D with 2D, after all.
True enough. Actually, the differences aren't too much of a problem (give or take an inch is hardly going to break the bank, after all!), it's the "14% bigger" quote from Shaw that I'm having trouble reconciling, espcially if it applied to the side views (it would made for some short doors!)...I can attribute that to the fact that these were all done by hand, on velum, long before CAD even existed. Given that, it's not surprising that there were minor differences... that's the problem with trying to represent 3D with 2D, after all.
Ah well, the search for precision continues...![]()
Well, anyone who can't figure out that David Shaw is a he is surely not up for a discussion of matters which require far more attention to detail. When you are serious enough to pay attention to your own thread, I'll reconsider expending time detailing how I reached my conclusions.I will have to seek out Shaw
I am interested in why he / she .. feels it should be 14% bigger
Well, that makes the assumption that I was talking about scale in every direction... which I wasn't, nor did I care about. I figured once the McMasters plans deviated from Jefferies, they were no longer needed for the work I was doing. There is enough Jefferies info around today to do a Jefferies bridge.it's the "14% bigger" quote from Shaw that I'm having trouble reconciling, espcially if it applied to the side views (it would made for some short doors!)
Well, anyone who can't figure out that David Shaw is a he is surely not up for a discussion of matters which require far more attention to detail. When you are serious enough to pay attention to your own thread, I'll reconsider expending time detailing how I reached my conclusions.I will have to seek out Shaw
I am interested in why he / she .. feels it should be 14% bigger
No it doesn't...Canon points to a forward facing bridge, regardless of the geometry issues.
That would be just the ticket for what I'm planning! Reading between the lines though, I take it you're not referring to a set of plans complete with measurements?!Well, that makes the assumption that I was talking about scale in every direction... which I wasn't, nor did I care about. I figured once the McMasters plans deviated from Jefferies, they were no longer needed for the work I was doing. There is enough Jefferies info around today to do a Jefferies bridge.
Unfortunately, actual numbers are the one thing missing from all the original plans and diagrams I've managed to find so far. Would you be able to point me in the right direction please?... and don't work from assumptions (like your corridor guess) when there are real numbers to be found and used.
No it doesn't...Canon points to a forward facing bridge, regardless of the geometry issues.Only your personal preference does.
The fact that you've had to jump through so many hoops to try to make that fit... including dropping it down a full deck height to what is normally considered "deck 2"... and where it no longer fits with the on-screen evidence that the bridge is in that dome... should be telling.
It's fine for you to prefer it facing forward (though there is NO rationale for insisting that the "main viewer" - which is nothing but a computer monitor - need face in the same direction as the travel of the vessel. It could face AFT and still do exactly the same job, after all!). Just don't make false statements about that somehow being "canon."
That would be just the ticket for what I'm planning! Reading between the lines though, I take it you're not referring to a set of plans complete with measurements?!Well, that makes the assumption that I was talking about scale in every direction... which I wasn't, nor did I care about. I figured once the McMasters plans deviated from Jefferies, they were no longer needed for the work I was doing. There is enough Jefferies info around today to do a Jefferies bridge.
Perhaps a good starting point would be using this particular illustration, although I always assumed that was just a sketch. Is there any indication that it was used as a plan for the actual building of the set?
Unfortunately, actual numbers are the one thing missing from all the original plans and diagrams I've managed to find so far. Would you be able to point me in the right direction please?... and don't work from assumptions (like your corridor guess) when there are real numbers to be found and used.
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No it doesn't...Canon points to a forward facing bridge, regardless of the geometry issues.Only your personal preference does.
Yeah, but it also shows Spock's quarters to be in the brig! (OK, that was Star Trek 3)
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