Welcome to our world! Pull up a chair and make yourself comfortable. We don't bite... much!Enterprise-D!
(btw, this is my first post)

Welcome to our world! Pull up a chair and make yourself comfortable. We don't bite... much!Enterprise-D!
(btw, this is my first post)
I was also amazed when I saw the wings fold on Tyderium. It was the first SW model I ever built. I proudly let it be displayed at the local hobby shop.Vader's shuttle Tyderium gets the vote from me. I remember seeing that thing fold up it's wings just as it landed. I have never seen anything do that before. It completely blew my mind.
My heart, though, goes out to NCC-1701...the original.
For aesthetic reasons alone, the Liberator from Blake's 7. So good JMS shamelessly copied it for the Excalibur in Crusade.
No great love for Vipers here, I see..
Mother-ship from "Close Encounters of the Third Kind."
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In the face of such clear & decisive photographic evidence, I see no logic to any argument against the choice of the pictured ship as the pinnacle of futuristic space vehicle design.The original/refit/Nu Enterprise for me, followed closely by the Discovery.
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I chose the original 1701, but several ships of note were left out, in particuar the Klingon D7 battlecruiser and the Eagles from Space: 1999. Those two ships are almost as recognizable as the 1701.
I've always liked the Eagles from Space: 1999
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The Vorlon ships were strange and wonderful.
I chose the original 1701, but several ships of note were left out, in particuar the Klingon D7 battlecruiser and the Eagles from Space: 1999. Those two ships are almost as recognizable as the 1701.
I've always liked the Eagles from Space: 1999
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I noted one of them.![]()
Kinda, but for an angelic race they sure picked a lousy color scheme. The paint jobs looked like someone threw up on the hull and smeared it around.The Vorlon ships were strange and wonderful.
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