I also imagined something like this, I would have liked some official confirmation. Instead in all sources I always find "The 4-foot model was built without the possibility of separation", without ever an explanation that led to the decision.My guess is that it would've made the miniature more expensive, it was unnecessary as they hadn't done a separation in years, and the giant 6 foot model wasn't too bad to work with when it was split into two smaller parts.
It’s a shame the idea was largely dropped.
If the separation hindered drama, why not make a 2-parter to make use of the separation flow more naturally in the script?
It's most telling in the early S3 episode "The Survivors" how restrictive the six foot model was when the f/x crew tried creating a shot of the Enterprise retreating from an attacking enemy vessel. It looks so stiff in its maneuverability. It's no wonder the best shots of the six footer were all the stock footage provided by ILM. But when Image G was put to task this was the best they could do.The four-footer was made to aid in filming because the six-footer was cumbersome, there was no need to make the Four saucer-sep capable. They already had both stock footage of the separation and a model that could perform it if new footage became necessary.
Was the hindrance of drama the reason they dropped it? I thought it was dropped due to adding unnecessary strain on the FX department?
Have I ever mentioned how much I hate the 4-foot model? It looks like a bumpy Lego set. The original 6-foot model is so much nicer.
Man, you can tell in the VFX shot from The Survivors that they're just pivoting the model around its ventral mounting point.It's most telling in the early S3 episode "The Survivors" how restrictive the six foot model was when the f/x crew tried creating a shot of the Enterprise retreating from an attacking enemy vessel. It looks so stiff in its maneuverability. It's no wonder the best shots of the six footer were all the stock footage provided by ILM. But when Image G was put to task this was the best they could do.
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Then when they finally have the four foot model they're able to do these kind of shots with a lot more freedom of movement.
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It can be a combination of moving the model and the camera together, as the raw model footage from The Roddenberry Vault demonstrated:Perhaps, but it's usually the camera that moves.
I suspect that was not so much a limitation of the model as a limitation of Image G. I suspect ILM could have done just fine with it. Heck, the refit Enterprise model built for TMP was even larger, about 8 feet, and the late, great Doug Trumbull said he would have preferred it to have been larger than that.It's most telling in the early S3 episode "The Survivors" how restrictive the six foot model was when the f/x crew tried creating a shot of the Enterprise retreating from an attacking enemy vessel. It looks so stiff in its maneuverability. It's no wonder the best shots of the six footer were all the stock footage provided by ILM. But when Image G was put to task this was the best they could do.
The bumpy Lego aspect was to help show relief detail and depth on low-resolution CRT (cathode ray tube) TVs of the time, the median size being 25", with large clunky dot pitch that made everything look blurrier and soft.
That said, flat screens are becoming more prevalent as the technology is good enough, and to eke out a little more contrast detail on a 27" CRT would require 400w whereas an LCD would take 165w:
https://caec.coop/tips/clear-picture-television-energy-usage/
It was 100% this.From what I recall, the flow of the drama was a reason for discontinuing the separation gimmick.
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