On the Miranda, Constellation, and Cheyenne, where is the deflector?
The Mirandas deflectors are located in those little pods on the upper side of the saucer section
...Pods conveniently identical to the three things surrounding the dish of the corresponding Enterprise - and thus being right where the "THIS IS THE NAVIGATIONAL DEFLECTOR" arrow would be pointing at in most diagrams.The Mirandas deflectors are located in those little pods on the upper side of the saucer section
Timo Saloniemi
There's a very similar-looking structure to port and starboard, but the structure below the dish is lacking. That is, there are three (rounded) prongs to the hull, just like in TOS, but the bottom one isn't further decorated with that TMP style doodad - only the lateral ones are.Not sure if the nuTrek JJ'prise has any such features, I'l have to take a look...
The dish might be utterly unrelated to the deflection mission, too. Perhaps it's a pure sensor system that sees farther and faster when leeching off the FTL beams of the deflectors?
There's a very similar-looking structure to port and starboard, but the structure below the dish is lacking. That is, there are three (rounded) prongs to the hull, just like in TOS, but the bottom one isn't further decorated with that TMP style doodad - only the lateral ones are.Not sure if the nuTrek JJ'prise has any such features, I'l have to take a look...
Timo Saloniemi
The original D7 actually has a deflector dish detail quite a bit like the deflector dish of the Constitution.Deflectors on most Federation cruisers are mounted alongside the big dish in front (which is the reason it's called the "deflector dish"). The dish itself is not actually part of the deflector, it's a massive subspace radiotelescope that draws its power from the deflector systems. That big dish is a unique feature in Starfleet, whose primary mission is one of exploration and the ability to take extremely long-range sensor readings at high fidelity -- or to send legible signals over an extremely long distance -- are crucial to the exploration program. Only long-range exploration vessels feature these large telescopes in their design, and some designs like the old Newton class starships or the latter Intrepid and Nova classes actually feature multiple deflector dishes so that one can operate in active/transmitting mode and the other can run in passive/listening mode; this double-dish setup is probably useful for ships that perform mapping surveys of new solar systems, needing to take very high resolution scans from a distance in a relatively short time.
The Mirandas deflectors are located in those little pods on the upper side of the saucer section, about midway between the bridge and the docking ports on either side. The Mirandas do not have the big dish because they aren't intended to operate in deep space and don't do a lot of high-resolution deep-field imaging.
Constellation has similar structures, IIRC, on the upper and lower nacelle pylons. This vessel also lacks the big subspace telescope of the Constitutions, but features instead a huge amount of short-range sensor equipment for detailed planetary surveys.
Of course, I have no evidence. Only a theory, which happens to fit the facts.
That actually makes rather good sense. If you want to shoot a powerful death ray to a great distance, it might get a nice boost from sitting in the middle of a device intended to project a beam at a great distance at high FTL speeds!The dimple on the nose of the D'Deridex was also supposed to be a deflector dish, but the FX guys just used it as a random beam emitter.
The nose of the Galor is also supposed to be a deflector dish, but again, for some reason it was used as a random weapon emitter, despite having plenty of purposely included emitter points like the D'Deridex model.
The absence or presence of dishes is difficult to interpret systematically, because currently there are even some shuttlecraft with obvious blue-glowing deflector dishes (whereas the Danube runabouts seem to lack those).
I never considered that, it's an interesting idea.The absence or presence of dishes is difficult to interpret systematically, because currently there are even some shuttlecraft with obvious blue-glowing deflector dishes (whereas the Danube runabouts seem to lack those).
Actually the Danube's deflectors are built into its nacelle pylons (the front-facing blue glowy thing just inside of the nacelles). In appearance, their deflectors are similar to the one on Defiant. That may tell you something or it may not.
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