None of it was visible in the episode proper, was it?
Yes, it was, but note that all of the dimensions apart from those of the warp nacelles were completely obstructed by Stamets' body.I posted images last page. This is from a 580p streaming copy, I'm sure the 720p/1080p version would be easier to read.
It's specifically mentioned in the design feature of the Eaglemoss booklet that the VFX team did indeed shorten the engineering hull, among other changes made to the final model. See around 12:15-12:20 of this video:Ok, I've done a little bit of lining up (the display image isn't really clear enough for an overlay to be useful) and it seems like while you're right that the neck size isn't different, the overall proportions of the ship are a bit adjusted, which is I think why it seems a little less squashed to me in the final model.
[image]
Notably, the engineering section and the nacelles seem like they might be scaled back a bit when matched against the diameter of the saucer.
Yeah they just stole all the specs from the TOS Tech Manual, so it doesn't work at all.(Of course, there are still inconsistencies in what was shown anyway. As always.)
I meant the VFX team on Enterprise, they had the rear torpedo coming out of that glowy thing above the shuttlebay.Well, the entire impulse deck seems to have been repositioned anyway. So the ship Drexler interpreted, and TOS-R defined in terms of the red impulse glow, is of a different configuration and may well have its aft torpedo tube at centerline where there obviously is no docking port "any longer".
Timo Saloniemi
That makes sense.Sort of like the original VFX team had the forward torpedoes coming out of the glowing dome at the bottom of the saucer.
That makes sense.
I saw them described in one novel as just being the container that holds the warhead, none of the other casing.Yes, they were "photon" torpedoes, after all. Presumably they were meant to be a ball of ultra-high energy EM radiation... which didn't travel at the speed of light for some reason.
Unless we were wrong all along and the term is Vietnamese, in which case phở tôn torpedos are a religious noodle soup. I dont know how that works. But I don't know how light particles in cased in spockcoffins works either.I saw them described in one novel as just being the container that holds the warhead, none of the other casing.
Well I meant specifically the TOS torpedoesUnless we were wrong all along and the term is Vietnamese, in which case phở tôn torpedos are a religious noodle soup. I dont know how that works. But I don't know how light particles in cased in spockcoffins works either.
Yes, they were "photon" torpedoes, after all. Presumably they were meant to be a ball of ultra-high energy EM radiation... which didn't travel at the speed of light for some reason.
I saw them described in one novel as just being the container that holds the warhead, none of the other casing.
In The Making Of Star Trek, they were described as "energy pods of matter and anti-matter contained and held temporarily separated in a magno-photon force field." Following on from this, Andrew Probert envisioned them as "glowing globs of plasma or some sort of energy" for TMP. It wasn't until TWOK that they were re-imagined as physical projectiles-cum-coffins.Aren't photon torpedoes of the 23rd and 24th centuries (and to a similar though lesser and not-as-advanced extent the photonic torpedoes developed by the United Earth Starfleet around 2153 and likely using knowledge gleaned from taking scans of Klingon photon torpedoes) antimatter warheads placed inside a warp-capable casing with engines? I don't know how a photon torpedo can be just light or a mass of energy fired from an external hardpoint unless there's a definition of photon torpedo I'm unaware of or isn't considered canon.![]()
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