JOHN MOGAVERO Yes. There are now two episodes released. Sorry for the delayed response. Episode 102 "Anchors Aweigh" is actually chronologically before Episode 101 "Haunted." I recommend chronological viewing, personally. -- Ken :)
Thanks, I love the Franz Josef Dreadnought class design. I wonder why it has a rearward facing navigational deflector dish. Do they do a lot warp travel in reverse? Haha. Ahhh, maybe they have a Dish mounted to the rear for use as alternative to navigational deflector as we have seen in several episodes.
In the days when the Dreadnought was invented, in 1975, the dish was just a sensor, not a deflector, as far as anyone knew. That said, the Dreadnought is a warship, not a science vessel. It is better shielding for combat, primarily. There could be other uses. My personal intent is to one day show off one of the ideas I have for it in an episode with a Dreadnought so it will answer that question. Don't mean to be cryptic, just want to save it for a story and not spoil it. :)
Gene wasn't fond of the single nor triple nacelle designs, and declared them decidedly *not* canon. He explains that warp drive testing in the early days bore out that two nacelles were optimal. According to Gene - One nacelle can't generate a warp field, as a warp field requires two nacelles that can "see" each other, for a warp field to be generated. Adding a third nacelle turns out not to be worth it. Warp field physics prevents the third nacelle from adding any appreciable increase in speed nor acceleration.
This is cool.
I'd watch that show!
Is this gonna be a series on TH-cam??
JOHN MOGAVERO Yes. There are now two episodes released. Sorry for the delayed response. Episode 102 "Anchors Aweigh" is actually chronologically before Episode 101 "Haunted." I recommend chronological viewing, personally. -- Ken :)
Thanks, I love the Franz Josef Dreadnought class design.
I wonder why it has a rearward facing navigational deflector dish.
Do they do a lot warp travel in reverse? Haha.
Ahhh, maybe they have a Dish mounted to the rear for use as alternative to navigational deflector as we have seen
in several episodes.
One front deflector wasn't enough for three engines? I'd be more interested in the two small extras dishes on the front.
In the days when the Dreadnought was invented, in 1975, the dish was just a sensor, not a deflector, as far as anyone knew. That said, the Dreadnought is a warship, not a science vessel. It is better shielding for combat, primarily. There could be other uses. My personal intent is to one day show off one of the ideas I have for it in an episode with a Dreadnought so it will answer that question. Don't mean to be cryptic, just want to save it for a story and not spoil it. :)
Gene wasn't fond of the single nor triple nacelle designs, and declared them decidedly *not* canon. He explains that warp drive testing in the early days bore out that two nacelles were optimal.
According to Gene - One nacelle can't generate a warp field, as a warp field requires two nacelles that can "see" each other, for a warp field to be generated.
Adding a third nacelle turns out not to be worth it. Warp field physics prevents the third nacelle from adding any appreciable increase in speed nor acceleration.
Get rid of the Sissssshhh sound as it flies by, all else awesome.