I certainly would if I wanted my prop to look like TOS!Thing is, though, would you really want your weapon giving off any light that could help an opponent possibly locate your position more accurately?
The laser pistols as well as the Phaser I and Phaser 2 and even the original phaser rifle had no apparent lighting fx other than a beam being fired added to them in post production. If the original phaser rifle has any parts that lit up they weren’t apparent or were never used.
In like manner the nacelle domes of the fullsize shuttlecraft exterior mockup were supposed to light up, but they never were shown that way.
I actually hadn't realised the difference between the white detail on the upper cylinders in the top image had been toned down so much in the final schematic!
Gotcha. How about something like the colour of the screen surround on top that's ahead of the power intensity dial then?The detail on the cylinders wasn’t white, but the same shiny silver as the other bits. I just thought the silver on the cylinders was a bit much.
Thats the same silver.Gotcha. How about something like the colour of the screen surround on top that's ahead of the power intensity dial then?
Was sure it looked darker in the plan view!Thats the same silver
I’m giving it thought. It would be cool to have some sort of lighting effect. Then again the TOS props seemed to have taken some abuse so you wouldn’t want to risk roughing up an expensive prop to the point of damaging internals.
I’m giving it further thought.
When Roddenberry said writers had to treat a character using a phaser like a cowboy using a pistol, he's answering your question. Go watch an episode of Gunsmoke, Bonanza, The Rifleman or Rawhide and watch how a cowboy character wields his rifle. I'm not sure it matters that much how it would really be used. The cowboy character is the frame of reference a viewer watching Star Trek would bring to seeing this phaser being used. So that's how a security guard should wield his phaser rifle.
As Winchell Chung found, people were speculating about launching submarines into space a few years before Star Trek first aired:
http://www.projectrho.com/public_html/rocket/images/reactionlessdrive/analog.jpg
“Artwork by John Schoenherr. Analog Magazine June 1960. Skate class submarine converted into a spacecraft with a Dean Drive. Note coolant tank below submarine.”
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