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Re: (STICKY) VISUALIZATION OF HONOR | |
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by Frankjg » Thu Mar 20, 2014 11:55 pm | |
Frankjg
Posts: 73
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Not Bad. Keep it up. I say you are close to what Honor should look like. Uniform clashes with the House of Steel. But I go for it. Bottom 2 pictures are the best.
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Re: (STICKY) VISUALIZATION OF HONOR | |
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by AirTech » Sun Mar 30, 2014 10:56 pm | |
AirTech
Posts: 476
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As for four engine airliners losing power - it happens about once every four to five years - running out of fuel or air will do it. (The fuel is obvious - not putting it in (refer Gimli Glider), air is harder and usually requires a volcano (BA009) but water will do too). Mechanical failure is an option too - piston engined airliners used to lose an engine on every second transatlantic flight - sometimes literally, QF32 showed that this can still happen (and they had one engine disintegrate, another engine FOD out as a result and a third jammed at full throttle - not a nice scenario, El Al 1862, China Airlines 358 and AA191 were worse with a total loss. On a military ship I would be designing a uniform that can be worn under an emergency pressure suit in a pinch - you have 30 seconds useful consciousness in a compartment opened to space - access to oxygen is critical to survival. Jackets may be stylish but they are totally impractical in a zero g or engine room environment and get in the way in engineering services - there is a reason boiler suits were invented and worn by those whose job (i.e. engine room crew) involves getting dirty for a living - human skin is not very resilient to sharp objects at any speed. Snagging is a big issue that needs to be watched. (BTW naval engine room boiler suits are traditionally white cotton to prevent tattooing of the dye and debris in the overalls in the event of a high pressure steam leak - more of a historical note now but it has become traditional even though Nomex would now be a better choice). I would suggest a kevlar / nomex / gortex / elastane analog dress code would be more common - current military flight suits (olive drab optional - black makes better camouflage in space - electro- / chemo- / photo-luminescent built in may be an option too for recovery in dark enviroments - look at the NASA Z-2 pattern pressure suits) would be a more typical pattern than current naval patterns for operational use. Engineering areas should have universal fit pressure suits (similar to the Z pattern suits) directly adjacent to the work areas as in an emergency you can't spend 5 minutes pulling on a skin suit, and emergencies don't always give notice. (In the event of a leak you would step into a pressurized closet (phone booth?) and into the suit back and step back to work). Dress uniforms are another matter and I would expect excessive tinsel to be normal for some services (i.e. take South American / African military for example). Survival capsules would need to include pressure suits for all occupants and survival equipment for more benign environments. |
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Re: VISUALIZATION OF HONOR | |
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by Dr. Arroway » Wed Apr 30, 2014 11:13 am | |
Dr. Arroway
Posts: 41
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Best Honor I've ever seen.
Now, we just need to find a gifted and VERY young actress who looks precisely like THAT. |
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Re: (STICKY) VISUALIZATION OF HONOR | |
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by dreamrider » Wed May 28, 2014 12:09 am | |
dreamrider
Posts: 1108
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There was never any intention from the first time that RFC mentioned this project for a CGI Honor. It has always been conceived of as a live action project, since the first movie deal 10 years ago, which fell through. Only fans who had never read David's comments on movie possibilities over the years ever suggested that it would be CGI characters (except Nimitz). dreamrider |
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