Wow...!! This magnificent...!! And mesmerizing...!! Your fantastic talent keeps surprising me exponentially...!!! Congratulations and thank you so much for this perfect virtual tour in our beloved ship...!! ❤️ 🤩🖖✨️👏👏👏
I had never noticed the no smoking signs on the refit until I started building these interiors and really started scrutinizing reference material so now it's almost an inside joke and I feel obligated to put them everywhere.
@@robbetzIsn't there a hard to spot No Smoking sign on the bridge of one of the ships? I remember reading that once (don't remember where) and got a chuckle out of it.
I really enjoyed this. Well done. But can someone explain how the blast door that comes @10:09 in the video doesn't cut the flow of energy to the nacelles? This always bothered me in the movie as well.
When I saw it in the movie it happens so fast. I think I remember wondering about that when I was a kid. Seems like I remember pondering that design quite a bit. Back then I wanted to make it work, and came up with designs in my mind of how it could work. Today I look at it and think "ah that is a pretty cool effect" at some point the magic leaves, we get distracted and forget and we have to work hard to get it back.
I’m kinda confused about where it’s coming from, I thought the curvature seen over the conduit was the curvature of the outer hull, or is the outer hull roughly 3 meters thick - tall enough for this door to retract into? Also seems the upper part of the warp core would protrude into the torpedo area.
@ well there is a deck above that. But I am not sure there is enough room. May have to just chalk it up to “it was for the movie” just like the dual torpedo rooms (only one can fit).
Outstanding! The warp core runs through the neck of the Enterprise, which is a design flaw. One lucky shot could severed the neck and crippled the ship. As seen in the Wrath of Khan. Khan was focusing. phaser fires on the Enterprise neck area
The Enterprise-E did away with the neck. The saucer set on the secondary hull. Starfleet is finally learning the lesson on vulnerabilities of their ships
Thank you! If I can find enough reference material for the Enterprise A engineering I'll build it. I don't image the layout is too different given the ship design was nearly identical.
@@SimmyMetal same as the D? Really? I would have thought it was just like the refit. I swear the glimpses I caught in TUC made it look like the refit. It didn’t have the D’s ugly warp core did it?
Three observations, in descending order of importance: (1) This is absolutely amazingly good work - the sense of this being a real place is overwhelming. Congratulations and thank you! (2) As I understand it the fore of the main engineering compartment is basically abutting up against the top part of the main deflection dish and systems. (3) I never understood the in-universe logic for having the supposedly reaction-mediating dilithium crystals off in a separate room on a pedestal not obviously connected to the rest of the intermix chamber - as reaction-mediating crystals wouldn’t they be right in the middle of the action where matter meets antimatter, as we see in TNG onwards? I understand the narrative need to tack on such a room for Spock’s scene of heroic demise but it still baffles me how a vertical warp core with no conduits in and out of it except the horizontal portion that leads to the nacelles is somehow feeding enormous amounts of material into the crystals and getting an enormous amount of energy out - all through a single pedestal. But that’s science fiction for you. Thanks for this. Keep up the good work!
@@qubex 1. Thank you!!! 2. This room exists for no reason other than to give Spock a place to die where he could be physically separated from Kirk. 3. There was at least one corridor leading to it and schematics I have show some kind of deflector control forward of engineering. So there will be. My real problem is getting the vertical intermix chamber and a turbolift through the torpedo room and the neck. Some of the schematics really conflict as to how that actually happens. Stay tuned to see how it figure it out 😉
Although it doesn't explain how it connects to the warp core, one explanation I read elsewhere in the comments was that this dilithium chamber room was added to the Enterprise specifically to help facilitate its role as a training vessel. The separate room would help cadets practice doing work on the crystals in a smaller space that's easier to isolate and decontaminate than the rest of engineering.
Typos aside, the detail of the images, the music, and the way the tour flowed! All superb! Believe I have mentioned how great it would be. If you linked all your 'sections' tours into on continuous video. Maybe add a shuttle fly around and docking. To transition from exterior to interior. 👍Also liked how and where you added the 'like and subscribe'!😁
Thank you! The end goal is a tour of the entire ship and EXACTLY how you described; my plan is to do a travel pod tour of the exterior, dock, tour the ship, make your way to the shuttle bay and depart that way. Going to take time, but if I can keep the momentum going and keep getting new subs, my wife will keep supporting my new hobby lol! Biggest challenge right now is the exterior; I'm stuck on the opening around the shuttlebay but I'm confident I'll figure out the geometry sooner or later.
@@robbetz Will be cheering from the side lines sir and look forward to the coming videos! Seem to remember a quote from someone involved in the early attempts to make blue prints of the Federation ships. 'It is tough because we are translating production stages for a television show, and trying fit them inside the model used for exterior shots.' Might have been Michael and Denise Okuda who said that, not really sure. Your work has been brilliant so far! @robbetz 🖖
I never even noticed the "no smoking" signs til I started researching to build these interiors. Found it amusing actually and now it's kind of an inside joke so I try to insert it wherever I can.
Stellar work, really beautiful I never realized how unsafe the whole engineering section was... those clear floor panels, those stairway openings right beside them and with no cover to open... nothing under the guard rails to stop you falling if you slipped... death trap!
Fantastic job - the detail work is incredible! It is so much fun to discover parts of this iconic location/set not captured during the films! Thank you!
Thank you! Though I can use ST music, none of the pieces are long enough and in my actual line of work (Photographer / cinematographer) I license a LOT of music libraries so I wanted to use pieces that would fit the lengths of the videos better and be more in line with the vibe I want. That and I can't monetize off ST music. If this hobby generates any cash, it will justify it to the boss (wife) ;-)
Wow. Just… wow. It’s beautiful. Mesmerizing. And the music adds a dimension of awe, majesty and mystery of such powerful technology. The Roddenberry Archive needs to have this. Brilliant. I need to watch it again.
I’m picturing this, in this same amazing level of detail, in a VR headset. THAT would be something. Especially if you could tour the rest of the ship…. I’d take a week off work. Lol!
My plan is eventually to do as much of the ship as possible, especially areas we never got to see. Will have to make most of that up, but who's going to tell me it's not accurate when we never saw it! ;-) And if I can figure out how to do it, I'll definitely try to turn this into a VR experience.
Very very nice. The music is hypnotic. One thing I always wondered... What's inside that tube with the blue colored top in the room marked "Radioactive"?, and what did Spock do when he reached in there to fix the engine in TWOK? It's been bugging me for decades🤔😄
As someone with an interest in engineering it pleases me that see how Star Trek has continued to evolve its design aesthetic over the decades (sit down Discovery).
really beautiful work. Top Tier. Love the way you took your time showing us around. Any desire to tackle areas of the ship that didn't make it to screen?
8:54 - So, in Search For Spock there’s the “Miracle Worker” scene where Kirk and Scotty discuss repair time. I can’t tell where this is shot for certain. But I think it’s right at the point where the vertical chamber connects to the horizontal. There appears to be some kind of terminal there with lights and a few other odds ends. In your research have you come across anything on this?
Dude, the music makes it feel like a psychedelic science fiction film. It just works. Are there major differences between this and the TMP engine room?
Engineering hull is wonderful than other sections when you're considering difference between 24th to 32nd century starship engineering systems. As we've discussed 6 to 8 engine and propulsion as one console under engineering advancement package, in contrast, science vessel and battle-cruiser are most fantastic than light vessel, diplomatic vessel, and medical ship. Meanwhile, if we assume warp speed has between 0 to 14 as Variable Speed of Light(VSL) jump into hyperspace, dean-drive and tachyonic slip-time engine should be considered updates on science vessel and battle-cruiser consoles during new logistic systems. On the other hand, Jupiter station 12 and main transporter has suggested to add to nearest membership spaceport landing services includes from Tau ceti xeta spaceport to Mintakan and M45. ...
One thing I've always been curious about is where is the computer terminal for accessing the Engineering Computer core of the secondary hull is located at because I know the Constitution Refit Class U.S.S. Enterprise has 2 computer cores one is located in the primary hull and the other is located in the secondary hull.
@@robbetzIf you look at pictures of the Enterprise they include schematics and computer screen images of the deck and component locations of federation starships like the Constitution Refit Class and the Galaxy Class and they clearly show there is an engineering computer core in the secondary hull.
@ the ones I had didn’t but I’d love to see the ones you’re referring to. We never actually saw the core itself except for when the ship was destroyed so I’m open to building it.
@@robbetzLook for the ones that you see like that of the Master Systems Display screen you would see in Main Engineering and it will clearly show you the computer core in the primary hull and in the engineering hull it will be shown near the main navigational deflector.
Great Bird of the Galaxy this is spectacular! I hate to be “that guy”, but one small boo-boo: your OPERATING INSTRUCTIONS sign for the respirator rack calls it a “sadsuit” 😢 on item #4.
@@iwantchoccy ah yes. A great mystery of the universe. I don’t have an answer. My assumption has always been that it comes down between the blocks that separate the tubes and everything is cut off appropriately?
@ that is my first thought, but if you look, there isn’t a raising portion that comes up to meet the pipe from beneath… plus the bulkhead is solid once it’s passed the pipe…
Awesome work!! Looks just like the original set...... minus the forced perspective......... The thing that always annoyed me about the design of the set is that the plasma conduits leading up to the pylons are on the wrong angle in relation to where engineering is located at the top of the secondary hull, and that there should be a lot more visible bracing toward the back of the engineering section to help support the pylons....
@@TairnKA I would think the frame of the ship is made from something really strong. Did they have structural integrity fields in this era? I don’t think I remember them ever being mentioned. Not until TNG.
@@robbetz I just thought there should be something there, but if the blueprints don't show anything, then that's it (btw - I used to work at Boeing in the 757 wing structures design group, then body structures). ;-)
@@mrtrek2117 thanks. It’s kind of a running joke with this enterprise; there was a huge no smoking campaign at the time wrath of khan was being made so there are no smoking signs in the ship in the film! 🤣
There's a "grammar" mistake in #4 in the operating instruction for the emergency respirator. Not nitpicking but of course if you are the Engineering chief, he should not overlook it.
A flawless video! Unfortunatly, too fawsless. That stupid bukhead door that lowers, cutting the horizontal portion of the warp drive in half. The people that made movie were clearly not stupid, so I can only imagine they didn't have the time or money to do it right. Still, a shame even 42 years later.
Thank you! Yeah the bulkhead door never made sense to me and was clearly just for effect during the attack but it would have almost been a crime not to include it.
I don't know why they went with this coloring for Engineering. I love the refit Enterprise, but I don't like this coloring. It should be darker, more utilitarian. Engineering needs to be "dirty," smelling of ozone and acetone. I think maybe it's too shiny.
@@therichieboy “this is the finest engine room in the whole Starfleet! If you can't see the facts for yourself, then, with all due respect, you’re as blind as a Tiberian bat!”
Scotty: Who the hell is Rob Betz, an why is he scribbling all over a display panel in MY engine room?!! Just kidding. Great job!!!
“Put another backup sensor into the unit!”
“Aye sir!”
Great work here!
It was an engine imbalance that created the worm hole in the first place.
I was looking for Officer Cleary!
@@cujoedaman it’ll happen again if we don’t correct it!
Man, this is beautiful! It really makes me want to at least make the Enterprise-D or Defiant Engineering sets.
Do it! I believe in you. I really liked your Nova Class bridge. And the Saladin videos. Outstanding work!
Some SERIOUS time spent on this. VERY well done, sir. Every detail looks amazing!
Thank you! Started this back in August and been working on it when I could. The true definition of "labor of love".
Fabulous work!. Still the best looking Engineering section they ever had
Absolutely gorgeous
Thanks!
Wow...!! This magnificent...!! And mesmerizing...!! Your fantastic talent keeps surprising me exponentially...!!! Congratulations and thank you so much for this perfect virtual tour in our beloved ship...!! ❤️ 🤩🖖✨️👏👏👏
Thank you! I'm so glad people are digging these as much as I do lol.
Beautiful work! It's easily my favorite warp core design and engineering deck. It's absolutely stunning. Can't wait to see more in the future!
Thank you! Lots more to come!
I love the engineering section! Thanks for giving us a tour of the refit engineering, and I look forward to seeing more excellent work!
Thank you! Lots more to come!
Admiral, what about the rest of the inspection?
Later! (mouthing the word)
Amazing recreation, down to the exact number of dust molecules on the console ;)
Can your cadets handle a little training cruise!
Absolutely fantastic! Love the music too!
Thank you so much!
Love the "No Smoking" signs just in case some midshipman wanted to light one up in engineering.
I had never noticed the no smoking signs on the refit until I started building these interiors and really started scrutinizing reference material so now it's almost an inside joke and I feel obligated to put them everywhere.
@@robbetzIsn't there a hard to spot No Smoking sign on the bridge of one of the ships? I remember reading that once (don't remember where) and got a chuckle out of it.
That's a lotta detail!
Lot of love went into this!
@robbetz I can tell.
I really enjoyed this. Well done. But can someone explain how the blast door that comes @10:09 in the video doesn't cut the flow of energy to the nacelles? This always bothered me in the movie as well.
@@MartyE lol yeah it’s a problem. My guess; it does cut the flow.
When I saw it in the movie it happens so fast. I think I remember wondering about that when I was a kid. Seems like I remember pondering that design quite a bit. Back then I wanted to make it work, and came up with designs in my mind of how it could work. Today I look at it and think "ah that is a pretty cool effect" at some point the magic leaves, we get distracted and forget and we have to work hard to get it back.
I’m kinda confused about where it’s coming from, I thought the curvature seen over the conduit was the curvature of the outer hull, or is the outer hull roughly 3 meters thick - tall enough for this door to retract into? Also seems the upper part of the warp core would protrude into the torpedo area.
@ well there is a deck above that. But I am not sure there is enough room.
May have to just chalk it up to “it was for the movie” just like the dual torpedo rooms (only one can fit).
@@robbetz A whole can of worms!
Outstanding!
The warp core runs through the neck of the Enterprise, which is a design flaw. One lucky shot could severed the neck and crippled the ship. As seen in the Wrath of Khan. Khan was focusing. phaser fires on the Enterprise neck area
@@Adiddy927 yeah definitely a weakness with such a skinny neck. Maybe that’s why the neck on the Excelsior was so thick.
And thank you!!
The Enterprise-E did away with the neck. The saucer set on the secondary hull. Starfleet is finally learning the lesson on vulnerabilities of their ships
Man this is a great video of the engine room of the refit Enterprise NCC-1701 I sure hope to see one on the Enterprise A.
Thank you! If I can find enough reference material for the Enterprise A engineering I'll build it. I don't image the layout is too different given the ship design was nearly identical.
@robbetz it's basically the same Engineering as the Ent D, plus a few more warning signs
@@SimmyMetal same as the D? Really? I would have thought it was just like the refit.
I swear the glimpses I caught in TUC made it look like the refit.
It didn’t have the D’s ugly warp core did it?
@@robbetz yes, it did!
@@brianparksdesign well damn…my Enterprise A engineering will have the flowing plasma core we all know and love.
Three observations, in descending order of importance:
(1) This is absolutely amazingly good work - the sense of this being a real place is overwhelming. Congratulations and thank you!
(2) As I understand it the fore of the main engineering compartment is basically abutting up against the top part of the main deflection dish and systems.
(3) I never understood the in-universe logic for having the supposedly reaction-mediating dilithium crystals off in a separate room on a pedestal not obviously connected to the rest of the intermix chamber - as reaction-mediating crystals wouldn’t they be right in the middle of the action where matter meets antimatter, as we see in TNG onwards? I understand the narrative need to tack on such a room for Spock’s scene of heroic demise but it still baffles me how a vertical warp core with no conduits in and out of it except the horizontal portion that leads to the nacelles is somehow feeding enormous amounts of material into the crystals and getting an enormous amount of energy out - all through a single pedestal. But that’s science fiction for you.
Thanks for this. Keep up the good work!
@@qubex
1. Thank you!!!
2. This room exists for no reason other than to give Spock a place to die where he could be physically separated from Kirk.
3. There was at least one corridor leading to it and schematics I have show some kind of deflector control forward of engineering. So there will be. My real problem is getting the vertical intermix chamber and a turbolift through the torpedo room and the neck. Some of the schematics really conflict as to how that actually happens.
Stay tuned to see how it figure it out 😉
Although it doesn't explain how it connects to the warp core, one explanation I read elsewhere in the comments was that this dilithium chamber room was added to the Enterprise specifically to help facilitate its role as a training vessel. The separate room would help cadets practice doing work on the crystals in a smaller space that's easier to isolate and decontaminate than the rest of engineering.
Typos aside, the detail of the images, the music, and the way the tour flowed! All superb! Believe I have mentioned how great it would be. If you linked all your 'sections' tours into on continuous video. Maybe add a shuttle fly around and docking. To transition from exterior to interior. 👍Also liked how and where you added the 'like and subscribe'!😁
Ooh yes! Do that, do that!!!
Thank you! The end goal is a tour of the entire ship and EXACTLY how you described; my plan is to do a travel pod tour of the exterior, dock, tour the ship, make your way to the shuttle bay and depart that way. Going to take time, but if I can keep the momentum going and keep getting new subs, my wife will keep supporting my new hobby lol! Biggest challenge right now is the exterior; I'm stuck on the opening around the shuttlebay but I'm confident I'll figure out the geometry sooner or later.
@@robbetz Will be cheering from the side lines sir and look forward to the coming videos! Seem to remember a quote from someone involved in the early attempts to make blue prints of the Federation ships. 'It is tough because we are translating production stages for a television show, and trying fit them inside the model used for exterior shots.' Might have been Michael and Denise Okuda who said that, not really sure. Your work has been brilliant so far! @robbetz 🖖
@@doberski6855 Thanks! I will make everything fit even if I need a shoehorn!
"No smoking while using a respirator."
As if smoking is on my mind when we're under attack.
Some people feel the need to light one up when they are under pressure. They are usually the ones that have one burning in every room they are in.
I never even noticed the "no smoking" signs til I started researching to build these interiors. Found it amusing actually and now it's kind of an inside joke so I try to insert it wherever I can.
Respects to you LL&P
Thanks!
Looks like a real set! Beautiful work!
Thank you! I appreciate that very much!
Fantastic work with amazing details. You put us right in the room. And I love what you did with the revolving door ;))
Thank you! Didn't want to just fly through the glass lol.
Stellar work, really beautiful
I never realized how unsafe the whole engineering section was... those clear floor panels, those stairway openings right beside them and with no cover to open... nothing under the guard rails to stop you falling if you slipped... death trap!
Thank you! Yeah seems pretty dangerous especially that personnel lift.
Captain Montgomery Scott: Hello computer.
I forgot to mention, I watched that 765874 Unification, very stirring.
Peace, and long life.
@@christophersnyder1532 A keyboard! How quaint! I watched Unification. Was a little confusing but touching nonetheless.
One of your best work.
Thank you!
Amazing work! It looks authentic. Bravo!
Thank you!
Fantastic job - the detail work is incredible! It is so much fun to discover parts of this iconic location/set not captured during the films! Thank you!
Thank you! It's been a labor of love!
Sadsuit in #3 of the Operating Instructions? Lol excellent work regardless..
@@Theman122082 yeah I wish photoshop spell checked. Lol. Corrected on the long run
I always thought the NO SMOKING sign was weird. I never seen a starfleet crew member walking around on duty with a cig.
Know your allergens! Pollen... animal dander... antimatter!
I'm very impressed with this omg!!!
Thank you!
Amazing attention to detail! Well done, sir!
Thank you!
Impressive 👏👏👏
@@TK42138 thank you 🙏
Beautiful work on the engineering section, the only thing that is missing is some TMP music.
Thank you! Though I can use ST music, none of the pieces are long enough and in my actual line of work (Photographer / cinematographer) I license a LOT of music libraries so I wanted to use pieces that would fit the lengths of the videos better and be more in line with the vibe I want. That and I can't monetize off ST music. If this hobby generates any cash, it will justify it to the boss (wife) ;-)
Wow. Just… wow. It’s beautiful. Mesmerizing. And the music adds a dimension of awe, majesty and mystery of such powerful technology. The Roddenberry Archive needs to have this. Brilliant. I need to watch it again.
Thank you! I'm flattered! It would be an honor to be included in the Roddenberry Archives library and have my name attached to something so awesome.
Wow, nice bit of work.
Thank you! It was more than a bit 😉
i always did love seeing this engine room
Best Enterprise ever!
Great work!
@@spinnerkeys thank you!
That is one beautiful video there !!!!!❤
Thank you!
I’m picturing this, in this same amazing level of detail, in a VR headset. THAT would be something. Especially if you could tour the rest of the ship….
I’d take a week off work. Lol!
My plan is eventually to do as much of the ship as possible, especially areas we never got to see. Will have to make most of that up, but who's going to tell me it's not accurate when we never saw it! ;-) And if I can figure out how to do it, I'll definitely try to turn this into a VR experience.
Question: could you do a segment on the original Enterprise engineering section?
oh yes. I plan on doing nearly the entire interior. Reference material already gathered.
00:20 “I’m taking over the center seat, Will.”
WIth all due respect, Admiral, this is an almost totally new Enterprise. You don't know her a tenth as well as I do!
So wonderful!! Congratulations!!! 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽
Thank you!
This is amazing! Loved& Subbed!
Thank you! Welcome to the crew!
Nice job. That was most impressive.
Thank you!
Very impressive 😊
Thank you!
Amazing work sir!!🎉🎉
@@danielfoster2339 thank you!
BRAVO!!!! Great work...Subscribed
Thank you! Welcome to the crew!
Amazing Work!
Thank you!
Very very nice. The music is hypnotic. One thing I always wondered... What's inside that tube with the blue colored top in the room marked "Radioactive"?, and what did Spock do when he reached in there to fix the engine in TWOK? It's been bugging me for decades🤔😄
@@jonmyers8046 the Dilithium crystals are in there. He realigned them I think
Beautiful!
Thank you!
Excellent lighting.
The details of texture and reflection.
Truly amazing talent you have there.
Superb.
Thank you for sharing.
Thank you!
Nicely done 👌🏼
Thank you!
"Fascinating."🖖
🖖
@@robbetz 🖖
Well done.
Thank you!
As someone with an interest in engineering it pleases me that see how Star Trek has continued to evolve its design aesthetic over the decades (sit down Discovery).
Fantastic job! I'm looking forward to more content with this one.
Thank you! Lots more to come!
Simply, WOW!
Thank you!
Fantastic! I want to go watch STTWOK again, now that I know the layout of engineering!
Thank you! It's by far the best Trek movie ever.
really beautiful work. Top Tier. Love the way you took your time showing us around. Any desire to tackle areas of the ship that didn't make it to screen?
@@christopherrobin4619 thanks. And yes, all of them! The whole ship!
WELL DONE
Thank you!
Beautiful. No other words😊
Thank you!
8:54 - So, in Search For Spock there’s the “Miracle Worker” scene where Kirk and Scotty discuss repair time. I can’t tell where this is shot for certain. But I think it’s right at the point where the vertical chamber connects to the horizontal. There appears to be some kind of terminal there with lights and a few other odds ends. In your research have you come across anything on this?
@@destinycaptain247 I have not but will check it out
Awesome!
Thank you!
So cool.
Thank you!
Brilliant!
Thank you!
Let's face it beautifully stunning. To be fair I feel like I'm actually there. Awesomeness is the word I'm looking for.
Thank you! The love my new hobby is getting really keeps me going!
This is Stunning thank you (:
Thank you!
the best. are you going to the TUC one too?
@@josiahclinch6219 probably
Great job!
From where is this music?
Das Wölfchen
@@c-417 I license music from Envato Elements. This is called Ambient Noire.
Give The Word!!!!!!!!!
@@nikvolt8298 the word is given 🖖😀
Superb
Thank you!
Bad ass job man!
Thank you!
Dude, the music makes it feel like a psychedelic science fiction film. It just works.
Are there major differences between this and the TMP engine room?
@@Username3141519 a few panels, and the chamber room
Engineering hull is wonderful than other sections when you're considering difference between 24th to 32nd century starship engineering systems. As we've discussed 6 to 8 engine and propulsion as one console under engineering advancement package, in contrast, science vessel and battle-cruiser are most fantastic than light vessel, diplomatic vessel, and medical ship.
Meanwhile, if we assume warp speed has between 0 to 14 as Variable Speed of Light(VSL) jump into hyperspace, dean-drive and tachyonic slip-time engine should be considered updates on science vessel and battle-cruiser consoles during new logistic systems.
On the other hand, Jupiter station 12 and main transporter has suggested to add to nearest membership spaceport landing services includes from Tau ceti xeta spaceport to Mintakan and M45.
...
@@linz8291 wow you know your stuff!
@robbetz Let's think about how to advance something new to engineering hull and updates on starfleet academy...Thank you, buddy.
How do the warp engines work when the emergency door comes down and cuts the warp core in half? I’ve always wondered that.
Amazing video though!
@@brianparksdesign thanks. The short answer is; they don’t 🤣.
That door makes no sense but I had an obligation to include it.
@ I’m glad you did. You just think they would have put a hole in the door so the core could flow through it, I guess 🤣
@ I’ll have to come up some kind of shut off.
One thing I've always been curious about is where is the computer terminal for accessing the Engineering Computer core of the secondary hull is located at because I know the Constitution Refit Class U.S.S. Enterprise has 2 computer cores one is located in the primary hull and the other is located in the secondary hull.
@@nicholasmorsovillo2752 I have a few different schematics but none show a secondary computer core so now I’m curious as well.
@@robbetzIf you look at pictures of the Enterprise they include schematics and computer screen images of the deck and component locations of federation starships like the Constitution Refit Class and the Galaxy Class and they clearly show there is an engineering computer core in the secondary hull.
@ the ones I had didn’t but I’d love to see the ones you’re referring to. We never actually saw the core itself except for when the ship was destroyed so I’m open to building it.
@@robbetzLook for the ones that you see like that of the Master Systems Display screen you would see in Main Engineering and it will clearly show you the computer core in the primary hull and in the engineering hull it will be shown near the main navigational deflector.
Are you planning to build the whole ship? From a VR perspective anyway
Yes.
Great Bird of the Galaxy this is spectacular! I hate to be “that guy”, but one small boo-boo: your OPERATING INSTRUCTIONS sign for the respirator rack calls it a “sadsuit” 😢 on item #4.
@@ScottGammans lol yeah; I put a note in the description. Didn’t catch it til I watched it after uploading 🤷
I’ll fix it for the long version lol
@@robbetzBut then again, considering how bereft Scotty looked when he carried his mortally wounded nephew in WoK, maybe it IS a sadsuit! 😮
@ too soon 🖖🤣
Only question…. How does that bulkhead drop without shattering the warp engine take off pipe?
@@iwantchoccy ah yes. A great mystery of the universe. I don’t have an answer. My assumption has always been that it comes down between the blocks that separate the tubes and everything is cut off appropriately?
@ that is my first thought, but if you look, there isn’t a raising portion that comes up to meet the pipe from beneath… plus the bulkhead is solid once it’s passed the pipe…
@ yeah. We just have to chalk it up to “this will look cool during the attack”.
Interesting that there has to be a "No smoking" sign in the warp core, you would think nobody would be smoking in the 23rd/24th centruries.
@@charlesball6519 there were signs all over the ship
Awesome work!! Looks just like the original set...... minus the forced perspective.........
The thing that always annoyed me about the design of the set is that the plasma conduits leading up to the pylons are on the wrong angle in relation to where engineering is located at the top of the secondary hull, and that there should be a lot more visible bracing toward the back of the engineering section to help support the pylons....
@@defiantpilot Thanks! This will eventually be matched up with the exterior so angles will be adjusted if needed.
Where did you source the background music?
Envato Elements. Great library.
The Voyager warp core almost looks this warp core. It almost has the same bluish hue
Maybe some of the same set pieces?
@robbetz I'll tell you what, it looks better than the Enterprise D's warp core
@@zazaranger5 Agree. I liked Voyager's core with the flowing plasma better than the Enterprise D which just had the rings going up.
My sadsuit doesn't contain any oxygen :( @1:23
LOL You should have gone to the happy suit locker.
Very nice 👌
Thank you!
Excellent work, but at 9:25; I'd expect to see some major support structure for the pylons? ;-)
@@TairnKA thanks!
No pylon supports. not according to blueprints.
@@robbetz Ah, good point. ;-D
@@TairnKA I would think the frame of the ship is made from something really strong. Did they have structural integrity fields in this era? I don’t think I remember them ever being mentioned. Not until TNG.
@@robbetz I just thought there should be something there, but if the blueprints don't show anything, then that's it (btw - I used to work at Boeing in the 757 wing structures design group, then body structures). ;-)
@ I mean you’re not wrong. You’d think those huge engines would need support. 🤷
SpaceX has entered the chat.
SpaceX has nothing on Starfleet!
I own one of the original blueprints from this set.
Lucky dog!
“Well Mr Scott. Are your cadets capable of handling a minor training cruise?”
"Give the word, Admiral."
The word is given
No smoking? Great animation though!
@@mrtrek2117 thanks. It’s kind of a running joke with this enterprise; there was a huge no smoking campaign at the time wrath of khan was being made so there are no smoking signs in the ship in the film! 🤣
There's a "grammar" mistake in #4 in the operating instruction for the emergency respirator. Not nitpicking but of course if you are the Engineering chief, he should not overlook it.
Yep. Caught it not long after posting. Noted in the description and corrected in the long running version.
where is the duel axis generator?
@@ShanenWay duels are banned by the Federation. It’s moved past that sort of violence. 🖖😉
@@ShanenWay but seriously that prop wasn’t seen in engineering. To my recollection it was seen on Regula One and on the hangar deck in STV.
@@robbetz ahh wasnt aware of the ban, ill keep myself updated farther on
;)
@@robbetz i believe your collect
Can u tell me the name of the song i can't find it an i like the song
@@edturner2064 it’s from Envato Elements “ambient noire future” by Scorewizards.
K
I still can't find can u help me ur put me in the right direction
@ yes I’ll try post a link but sometimes YT deletes them
Noice!
A flawless video! Unfortunatly, too fawsless. That stupid bukhead door that lowers, cutting the horizontal portion of the warp drive in half. The people that made movie were clearly not stupid, so I can only imagine they didn't have the time or money to do it right. Still, a shame even 42 years later.
Thank you! Yeah the bulkhead door never made sense to me and was clearly just for effect during the attack but it would have almost been a crime not to include it.
0:58 not cannon. ;)
There is no Cannon only Zuul.
I don't know why they went with this coloring for Engineering. I love the refit Enterprise, but I don't like this coloring. It should be darker, more utilitarian. Engineering needs to be "dirty," smelling of ozone and acetone. I think maybe it's too shiny.
Mr. Scott would never allow engineering to be dirty.
🫨BEAUTIFUL 👏🏿👏🏾👏🏽👏🏼👏🏻🖖🏿🖖🏾🖖🏽🖖🏼🖖🏻🖖
Thank you!
Goof looking death trap
Not if you wear your sadsuit! 🤣😆
A great depiction of an awful engine design!
@@therichieboy “this is the finest engine room in the whole Starfleet! If you can't see the facts for yourself, then, with all due respect, you’re as blind as a Tiberian bat!”
@@robbetz in that case...the word is given!