Whenever I see those dual torp launchers, I am somehow reminded of this:



Exactly this.Nope, the window would be useless even then. First of all, you won't be able to see out of it, since the bridge is lighted and space isn't. Ever try looking out of a window a night? You see nothing but your own reflection. Second, even if you could see out, you've got an angle of view from the bridge that only covers maybe one-eighth of the space around the ship; anything aft, ventral, or too far to the sides is right out. Third, even if you had unobstructed views, everything is kilometers in the distance, or even tens, hundreds, or thousands of kilometers — much too far away for the naked eye to make out, without a viewscreen to magnify it.
Agreed. I also thought the Probert version (the proto Ambassador class) was nice but looked too advanced to be a forerunner of the 1701D. Shame we only saw the Ambassador class in small doses. I was hoping DSC had been an anthology show and we’d have got a 1701C series...the Ent-C was an absolutely beautiful ship.
That wasn't the argument. But, I see your point.Umm, I don't follow your reasoning here.Starfleet engineers: "Putting a window on the bridge instead of a viewscreen would do absolutely nothing to help the crew. What the heck, why not do it anyway?"
In fact, it could arguably subtract value. With a viewscreen, the bridge module is genuinely modular; a ship's captain can customize its orientation to fit whatever suits him (e.g., the infamous 36-degree offset of the TOS bridge). With a window, everything is stuck in a fixed position.
Was that on purpose? I just assumed it was a mistake between the set planning and model design.In fact, it could arguably subtract value. With a viewscreen, the bridge module is genuinely modular; a ship's captain can customize its orientation to fit whatever suits him (e.g., the infamous 36-degree offset of the TOS bridge). With a window, everything is stuck in a fixed position.
The thread that discusses this design is here. judexavier was the designer and @MadMan1701A was building the mesh...Aside: Just came across this design. Said artist unknown:
![]()
Not "on purpose" from the very beginning, no; rather, the separate underlying components were all on purpose, and reconciling the exterior to the interior became an after-the-fact exercise.Was that on purpose? I just assumed it was a mistake between the set planning and model design.
Exactly this.
Also, in TWOK, when they’re in the nebula (pay attention people who defend the window) as Spock served on the Enterprise in the good old days when she had a window, because it’s the same ship as in DSC, doesn’t that mean Spock was either incompetent or negligent in TWOK as XO of the Enterprise for not sending a crewman to a window?
Shouldn’t Spock have been like “jim, in my day we had a window up front there and it worked wonders” so Kirk would be “send ensign Ricky to the window mr Spock and coordinate with him and communicate with him regularly!”
But no - Spock stares steadfastly at his console in the nebula and Kirk even says:
“Look sharp everyone” as they’re staring AT THE VIEWSCREEN.
Spock never says “jim a window is logically the way forward here - we used to have a window back in the day - this is how we beat Khan”.
So as it’s the same ship, Spock is not the hero we all know him to be. No wonder admiral Morrow didn’t want Kirk to bother going to get him off genesis.
Agreed. I also thought the Probert version (the proto Ambassador class) was nice but looked too advanced to be a forerunner of the 1701D. Shame we only saw the Ambassador class in small doses. I was hoping DSC had been an anthology show and we’d have got a 1701C series...
Or come up with things people can’t refute/explain... heheheI'll be damned if Trekkies don't over-think stuff.
Probert's Enterprise-C is another design that looks better from some angles than others, in my opinion:
http://www.modelermagic.com/?p=28446
Which is a nice answer if you don’t think an explanation is warranted... or you can’t explain it (although I’ll admit lack of a better explanation doesn’t make mine correct - I think a Vulcan once taught me that...!)Thing is, there's nothing to explain, in-universe. Things are changed in the real world, and they change in Star Trek. There's no in-universe explanation and no need for it unless you're expecting consistency from a franchise that is notorious for the lack of it.
And for everyone saying continuity isn’t affected etc etc. - it actually is because Spock’s character is done a disservice by him not recommending they look out a window like they did back in the old days.
Nice image of Phase II from Eaglemoss....
![]()
I have to say, much as I liked Enterprise, the cloaking device issue really annoyed me. Spock’s line in BoT was rendered inert by the frakking suliban (a pointless enemy given that the klingons were around in the 22nd century). That and the “simple impulse” line was ignored too.Spock is being slowly whittled down in Discovery. Michael Burnham has already done many of the things Spock had done over his career, in a single year. We also know that Spock simply doesn't know what he is talking about, witness his mistake where cloaking devices is concerned.
I fail to see how one mistake "whittles down" Spock.Spock is being slowly whittled down in Discovery. Michael Burnham has already done many of the things Spock had done over his career, in a single year. We also know that Spock simply doesn't know what he is talking about, witness his mistake where cloaking devices is concerned.
I fail to see how one mistake "whittles down" Spock.The most confusing aspect is that some how, in some way, if someone else does it first it takes away from another's story, even though Spock is unique in that he is actively trying to embrace the Vulcan way. He is constantly being challenged, and mocked, and continues forward to success, to the point that his father has to admit that he was wrong.
Only the ones the Romulans used.now we find out that he was in a war with cloaking devices yet still called them theoretical.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.