
Hi everybody!

Allow me to throw my hat into the ring. I wanted to see what could be done with drawing a ship composed of arcs and tori. Thus, the U.S.S. Tor. It's nothing more than a simple doodle. What do you think about the shapes?
It seems that the Enterprise-J (Jonathan Archer?) is now set as an evolution goal for everything in between E and J. So I'm not going to think too hard on whether or not a divergent design can be an Enterprise. It's just for fun.
The way I see it, any new advances in power and performance is largely dependant on plot. My idea is focused on layout. I picture it as the result of the experience gained when Starfleet operated DS9. If people here like the design, I'm thinking about possibly calling this ship a Rendez-Class.
So what we have is a saucer with impulse engines. Really basic. Too basic? Maybe it needs little nacelles blended on bottom protrusions, like the Defiant. I like the concept behind the Insignia-Class. Function pods can be docked on either flank of my saucer. The most extensive unit is a station arc. The crew no longer has to contend with guests barging in on the vital rooms of the ship. The crew's quarters are in the core saucer. The command saucer, and the gap around it are circles. The habitation ring is supposed to look like a hard boiled egg surrounding a yolk. Both the ring and core together are called the saucer.
I feel that the ring needs to split living quarters in two wings. When two antagonistic delegation parties are aboard, I'd sure like their staterooms to be as far apart as possible. The prow has the same volume as both wings combined. This is where people can convene, at the front of the ship. After Picard's recent adventure, perhaps it would be prudent to beef up the prow just a bit.
Like a parking lot, the shuttlebays are now large enough to accommodate the private craft of each guest at the same time. These bays are part of the battle section. It's to allow the section to serve as a carrier. Instead of tambour slats, the shuttlebay doors are rotating blisters. The habitation ring can be replaced by more door units.
I think the ship would still have a neck. It's the most direct route to the engineering section. The nacelle struts are only used to convey power, and provide access for maintenance. Yes people, if the Eiffel Tower can have an elevator in it's leg (funicular?), then a turbolift can travel in the struts. The roll bar holds the main sensor palette at a distance from the ship. Having it behind the saucer, presents a new opportunity. Any ship or artifact held in the dock, can be directly scanned and analyzed.
The dorsal surface of the engineering section is concave. A Franz Joseph cargo container can easily lay on top of it. Having a shuttlebay in the back would be too redundant. There needs to be something else in the round area there. Perhaps a really large industrial replicator pad can extend out the bottom. I can picture the ship hovering over an asteroid, dematerializing it for ore, and maybe even filling the raw material into the container. It works vice versa too. The engineering section is the ultimate truck bed.
The nacelles take the ring concept in a new direction. You can see the warp coils that comprise them. The Sovereign-Class has really long nacelles compared to its contemporaries. Perhaps it isn't that the ship has more coils, but that they have room to slide back and forth. I'd love to see a gimmick where they spring back like pinball plungers.
Another new gimmick is that the ship finally integrates experiments in catapult technology. It's to help push shuttles on their way, thereby conserving fuel.
Well, that's all I can think of for now. I'd love to hear your opinions. And feel free to use and add to this concept.

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