"Most"? Never been my impression. Granted, I was 10 in 1984, but I've always liked it.For that matter, for years most fans loathed the Excelsior class.
"Most"? Never been my impression. Granted, I was 10 in 1984, but I've always liked it.For that matter, for years most fans loathed the Excelsior class.
"Most" as in the vocal minority who cared enough to write in to fanzines and complain."Most"? Never been my impression. Granted, I was 10 in 1984, but I've always liked it.
I've never much liked any of ILM's starship designs for Trek movies. The only Trek movie starship designs I like are the ones from TMP and the Enterprise-E. Well, I kind of like the Nemesis Romulan warbirds (aka the Valdore or Mogai class), but they look a bit too Klingon.
Wasn't that sort of the intended goal? In the movie that made it to the screen, the Excelsior was an adversary vessel, an usurper of the position of the Enterprise. Like her captain, she was a buffoon and a bully. Her bloated appearance may well have been designed to reflect that. Heck, even the choice of name may have...
Timo Saloniemi
I seem to recall that some of the FASA issues might have been more the work of Richard Arnold, although Gene may have approved his actions on some level.
I also keep thinking Gene's view of the engines being codependent might go back in some ways to TOS, but I may be wrong on that. I seem to recall that Andrew Probert is generally comfortable with the assumption that nacelles work this way and should have LOS, but as mentioned I tend to ignore those as rules for my own head canon.
Wasn't that sort of the intended goal? In the movie that made it to the screen, the Excelsior was an adversary vessel, an usurper of the position of the Enterprise. Like her captain, she was a buffoon and a bully. Her bloated appearance may well have been designed to reflect that. Heck, even the choice of name may have...
That's an interesting take. The Reliant, the Klingon Bird of Prey and the Excelsior are some of the most iconic Trek ships not named Enterprise. Particularly the Reliant - if you like the TMP Enterprise, what's not to like in a more compact counterpart?
Of course, Sulu was going to command the Excelsior when she was still without form and could have looked cool, in the cut scene of ST2:TWoK. Back then, she might have been envisioned as less important than the current hero ship, with the name choice simply arbitrary, harking back to silly British ship names.
...I wonder who chose to use the name Excelsior, now that there was no obligation from the cut ST2:TWoK?
From what I understand, the "Excelsior" that Sulu was going to command in TWOK was just an insignificant ship and the line about it was just to show that Kirk's crew had moved on to other things. As for why the decision was made to name the NX-2000 the same name? They probably just thought it sounded cool.
Or just from the writer's natural instinct to recycle leftover ideas. Since creativity is a process of trial and error, with things being conceived and then discarded along the way and sometimes whole projects being abandoned, creators always accumulate drawers full of unused concepts that we can rummage through when we need them for a new project.
Interesting to latch on to two things that even in TOS did not seem to be essential for Starship design - I thought it was Jeffries' intention that the engine pods be the source of the dangerous reactions rather than the secondary hull?Mainly, the lack of a deflector dish, and the lack of the ability to separate the saucer from the engine section in case of emergency.
Interesting to latch on to two things that even in TOS did not seem to be essential for Starship design - I thought it was Jeffries' intention that the engine pods be the source of the dangerous reactions rather than the secondary hull?
Klingon and Romulan ships have similar outboard pods, but no obvious hull separation. Even the tiny D7 bridge section could only be a lifeboat for a small portion of the crew.
They also have no obvious deflector dishes.
The introduction in TMP of the reactor core, complete with handy ventral ejection port, still further reduces the usefulness of splitting hulls. When we look at the balance of Starfleet ships, it's surely a minority that are even capable of saucer separation.
Where did I say anything about a secondary hull? I'm saying the Reliant design has no evident modularity that would allow for separation.
Yeah, but those are warships, so there wouldn't be as much concern for safety engineering. They're more likely to get blown up by an enemy than to have an engine malfunction that requires jettisoning the engines.
The depression on the lower front of the Klingon battlecruiser's forward bulb, which TMP interpreted as a torpedo tube, was originally intended by Jefferies as a deflector dish. The Romulan BoP lacked one because it was designed by Wah Chang rather than Jefferies.
Yes, obviously the assumptions underlying Starfleet ship design have changed in the 35 years since TWOK came out, because TWOK's designs are part of the canon now and have obviously influenced what followed. I'm talking about how I reacted to the Reliant design at the time, how it reflected a lack of consideration for the design philosophy it was imitating. You asked what my reasons were, and that's what I've given you. I like the design sensibilities that guided Matt Jefferies's work. I think it was very smart and well-thought-out and credible, as well as gorgeous and elegant. By contrast, ILM's designs were not only less aesthetically pleasing, but less plausible as well, based purely on aesthetics rather than design logic. I just find them more superficial. I'm not trying to rationalize them in-universe (not unless I get paid to do so in a novel or story), I'm saying I'm not as fond of the design philosophy behind their creation as fictional constructs.
Take anything windbag Richard Arnold says with a lick of salt (LINK).I remember a letter in Starlog by Richard Arnold himself. He said the presence of the Excelsior in Star Trek ) III was to (exact quote coming) "show how great the Enterprise still was"
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