Ya, but Jefferies obscured the main deflector AND the phaser array by the saucer.
There is evidence to suggest that the NCC-1701 miniature was fabricated without visible weapons ports because Gene Roddenberry thought he could avoid telling stories where spacecraft shoot death rays at each other, and he even managed to achieve that until the demands of space opera became unavoidable circa
Balance of Terror. I don't know what you mean about the main deflector, sorry.
If a space rock comes at the ship from above the saucer, then it is obscured by the saucer. From it's position on the ship, it only deflects a small part of the stuff in the way. It also deflects a lot of stuff that is in no way going to hit the ship, since it is so far from the center line.
As well as having the warp pylons right next to the shuttle bay. (Those doors are a weak point.)
The warp pylons - assuming they extend into the secondary hull - would be hidden behind the bulkhead at the forward end of the shuttlebay.
So? If a shuttle loses control and smashes into that bulkhead... You lose your warp reactors? If a terrorist smuggles a small bomb onboard a shuttle... then it disables the ship? If an enemy shoots right into the shuttlebay, then that bulkhead should be as strong as the outer hull if it is to protect the structural integerity of those struts. That seems like a waste. And what about moving all those supplies and equipment that you bring aboard the shuttlebay... right past such a critical part of the ship. If anything, the shuttlebay should be in its own nacelle in case of an accident.
What radioactive waste? Tritium? The Doomsday Machine makes it clear that the impulse engines are thermonuclear fusion energized. Besides, any "accident" serious enough to vent impulse reactor products into the habitable section of the primary hull would very likely destroy the ship.
In
Obsession, radioactive waste was vented from the impulse engines.
"Captain, I cleaned the radioactive disposal vent on number two engine, but we'll be ready to leave orbit in a half hour."
"Open hatch on impulse engine number two."
"Mr. Scott was doing an A.I.D. cleanup on it."
"We won't be using the impulse engines. Turn the alarm off."
"When it entered impulse engine number two's vent, it attacked two crewmen, then got into the ventilating system."
http://www.voyager.cz/tos/epizody/48obsessiontrans.htm
And there doesn't have to be a major accident. What if the accident occurred during the cleanup procedure?
If the deflectors fail it wouldn't make the slightest difference where the bridge is located.
What about a glancing shot? Or simply moving from the bridge to other areas of the ship. If you need to get to the bridge, it will take longer than necessary.
Which was fixed by Jefferies for Phase II.
And so, Matt Jefferies wasn't perfect. Neither are the producers for the new show.
Observation posts for hard-dockings?
Is there even room to get there? Why waste bringing life support up that far in the ship's structure. Don't have remote cameras in the 23rd century?
Presumably the nacelle housing would opaque to gamma-rays and other products of anti-matter/koino-matter reactions so as to avoid irradiating the rest of the ship, but okay.
Couldn't that use some "subspace technobable field" to scan with? The Enterprise has FTL sensors. Why do you assume that sensor only detects gamma rays? Or why that's what it does?
As they would need to be exposed directly to the space environment to function, yes, I think so.
That's why the the heat sink in my computer case is directly exposed to the atmosphere and is not inside any case whatsoever. Right?
And why doesn't the impulse engine get a heat pipe? Or the refit Enterprise? Or the 1701-D? And if those "fins" on the refit Enterprise are heat pipes, why can't the fins on these craft be heat pipes too?
Nitpicking at TrekBBS.com? Heaven forfend!
As long as you realize you're nitpicking and not having a legit complaint...
The Enterprise didn't have very large heat radiators attached to the narcells like you would expect if that was their actual purpose.
How do you know that, exactly? As I pointed out only recently, the NCC-1701 could have been equipped with a radiator the size of a penny if it were run at sufficiently high temperature.
TGT
Then why do you gripe about the new 1701 which likewise could have a radiator the size of a penny.