Here I am looking through the DS9TM for a lark while stuffing frozen cookie plugs into my craw before bed, reading the Danube-class section where it talks about the design of the runabout launch & maintenance bays & something occurs to me: how in Cthulhu's name do they move the damned things? Or shuttlecraft for that matter?
In modern times, any craft like that are either self-taxied or towed by a small tractor, but this always involves the use of wheels, which these craft don't have...or do they? Perhaps they all have sliding panels on the bottom with retractable wheels behind them. But if so, how are they used? Do they just extend & lift the craft up so it can be rolled away? That seems a little off. Are there little antigravity Trek tractors that float along to tow them, mayhaps? (Which gives rise to an image of crew racing them in the larger shuttlebays...)
Possibly they have antigravity plates installed that allows them to hover. But again, how are they moved? Twelve guys lay their shoulders into it while one "drives"? I can't see use of impulse engines or even RCS thrusters in a bay to simply push the craft 50 meters or so. Large AG units stuck to the sides so the crews can float them along? AG plates that slide underneath & lift--upscaled versions of the smaller cargo trucks we've seen used? or maybe they detune the local gravity mat, but again--wasteful & inefficient.
I'm seriously having problems figuring this out. Yeah, we see shuttles & runabi at the ready all the time, but not ALL of them. We know they're put away in slots & bays for storage & maintenance. I just...motive power escapes me here.
In modern times, any craft like that are either self-taxied or towed by a small tractor, but this always involves the use of wheels, which these craft don't have...or do they? Perhaps they all have sliding panels on the bottom with retractable wheels behind them. But if so, how are they used? Do they just extend & lift the craft up so it can be rolled away? That seems a little off. Are there little antigravity Trek tractors that float along to tow them, mayhaps? (Which gives rise to an image of crew racing them in the larger shuttlebays...)
Possibly they have antigravity plates installed that allows them to hover. But again, how are they moved? Twelve guys lay their shoulders into it while one "drives"? I can't see use of impulse engines or even RCS thrusters in a bay to simply push the craft 50 meters or so. Large AG units stuck to the sides so the crews can float them along? AG plates that slide underneath & lift--upscaled versions of the smaller cargo trucks we've seen used? or maybe they detune the local gravity mat, but again--wasteful & inefficient.
I'm seriously having problems figuring this out. Yeah, we see shuttles & runabi at the ready all the time, but not ALL of them. We know they're put away in slots & bays for storage & maintenance. I just...motive power escapes me here.