Star Trek: 10 MORE Secrets About The USS Enterprise-D You Need To Know



More hidden details about Star Trek’s greatest starship, don’t @ us.

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39 thoughts on “Star Trek: 10 MORE Secrets About The USS Enterprise-D You Need To Know”

  1. Lighting has been the main problem for us model builders. People have pictures of the TOS Enterprise under studio lights and regular lighting and argue about which color is correct.

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  2. I noticed the changes of TNG Enterprise, but shrugged it off as refits. The TOS enterprise actually went through something like five different changes, or refits, the last three minor but there. BTW, in 1960s through 80s TV the TOS enterprise looked white. In fact the 1970s Enterprise model kit had for the paint of the ship as white. The original TOS model was not duck egg blue but a slightly greenish mid grey. I saw in person the refurbished version (which I think was much more to what it would have looked like in the studio, without the studio lighting, inferior film, and TV broadcast changes). It was grey with a slight tint of green. Duck egg blue is much lighter than the ship was. The movie Enterprise's color parts (the rest was white with different shininess) were duck egg blue.

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  3. The Enterprise-D had 1012 people aboard, not including any guests or special mission needs, ten foward could hold maybe 50 people at best, yet there were always open tables, makes no sense.

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  4. Zero G would have some great benefits. Burn patients (seems common with exploding consoles) would probably enjoy having less pressure on their burnt bodies while in bed. Patients with broken backs might be able to begin rehabilitation more quickly with less pressure on the damaged areas. If they have full gravity control, they could recuperate patients by slowly going from .1g to 1g.

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