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REVIEW — Hero Collector ALL GOOD THINGS Enterprise-D

The Galaxy-X class. The Galaxy-class Dreadnaught. The three-nacelled Enterprise.

Whatever name you know it by, the XL-sized, alternate-future version of the Galaxy-class Enterprise-D from “All Good Things…” — only seen in the 1994 Star Trek: The Next Generation series finale — has arrived at Warp 13 to the Hero Collector Official Starships Collection fleet!

“Set a course for the Federation — warp thirteen!”

For the 25-years-ahead future era Enterprise-D, the visual effects team at Star Trek: The Next Generation wanted to make the ship visually different from the “present” and “past” versions of the same starship.

In that era of physical models, it wasn’t as simple as just whipping up an alternate digital ship like in today’s Star Trek production — and they also needed to make sure the Enterprise-D filming model wouldn’t be damaged as the ship would still be required for new shots in the then-upcoming Star Trek: Generations feature film.

In the end, longtime TNG contributors Dan Curry and Greg Jein worked together to design the altered Enterprise-D using spare model parts — and eventually, Jein put together a series of plant-on, resin components including the underslung phaser cannon and top-mounted antennas for the saucer section, ‘speed fins’ below the nacelles (and phaser strips for the engines’ top sections), and the distinctive third warp nacelle.

The plant-on ‘All Good Things’ Enterprise model pieces, later sold at auction.

One of the earliest entries in the Official Starships Collection — all the way back in 2013 — was a 5.5″ version of the AGT Enterprise, originally a gift to monthly subscribers and later part Hero Collector’s online web shop offerings.

Produced in with grey hull coloring, that early model was designed to replicate the on-screen appearance of the ship, compared to the robin-egg blue shades of the new XL-sized edition, which — like the XL Galaxy-class model before it — emulates the look of the original studio model used in Next Generation filming.

The new XL edition measures nearly twice the original length — the saucer section is wider than the original subscriber-sized ship is long — and the coloring is much more in line with how we’ve come to expect Starfleet ships to appear in the Hero Collector lineup.

With the exception of the “upgrades,” the majority of the XL-sized future Enterprise is identical to the XL Enterprise-D model released back in 2017, complete with the metal lower half of the saucer section, and everything else produced from injection-molded plastic.

The future add-on components — from the rigid antenna units and enhanced module surrounding the dorsal bridge unit, to the mean-looking phaser cannon mounted on the bottom of the saucer section — are very nicely molded and painted, with plenty of gold and red color splashes highlighting them.

The most recognizable part of this ship, of course, is the third warp nacelle, mounted sturdily on a central pylon which extends out from the rear of the ship. Like the other nacelles, it’s got elements of translucent colored plastic in the bussard collector and blue warp coils along the sides.

Despite it’s large size, the future Enterprise-D variant sits quite well on its included display stand, something that’s been a problem for other XL-sized releases — the larger-scale Voyager and Enterprise NX-01 ships have a tendency to fall quite easily, a problem not found with this sturdy base.

There’s truly not much to complain about with this ship; aside from a minor bit of window misalignment on the secondary hull’s neck — a carryover from the ‘regular’ XL Enterprise-D model — the “All Good Things” variant is a great addition to the larger-scale model series.

If you want to add the “All Good Things” future edition of the Galaxy-class Enterprise-D to your own personal Starfleet armada, you can pick it up today from the Hero Collector web shop for $74.95 in the United States, and while it’s out of stock (as of this writing), fans in the UK will find it retailing for £49.99.

We’ll be back next week with another exclusive look ahead to more new additions on the way to the Hero Collector Official Starships Collection fleet, so keep your sensors locked on TrekCore for all the details!

DESTINATION STAR TREK: GERMANY Convention Moved Again; Postponed to September 2022

German Star Trek fans will need to wait more than a year to attend the long-delayed Destination Star Trek: Germany convention, after the event — originally set for a May 2020 schedule — has been pushed off the 2021 year entirely.

In what should be no surprise to anyone following the state of the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe, the team behind Destination Star Trek: Germany announced on Friday that the event will now not be part of the 2021 calendar at all… now warping out all the way to September 2022.

Originally scheduled for May 2020, the convention was first pushed out to October 2020 in the early days of the pandemic last year — and then moved again to a tentative June 2021 date, which is no longer feasible due to ongoing travel restrictions in Germany and Europe as a whole.

The Destination Star Trek event team announced the new dates — September 23-25, 2022on their Facebook page:

We are really sorry to have to inform you that due to Germany still effectively being in a Covid lockdown, we are unable to bring you Destination Star Trek on the 25th to the 27th June 2021.

Even if the best things now happened, there is now no way that the country will be open enough for large indoor public gatherings or easy air travel in and out of the country by the end of June. We are sorry to have no choice but to make this decision, but we also know that your health is more important than anything.

The good news though is that we will be moving Destination Star Trek to a date we feel certain should not be interrupted by Covid again! Therefore, the re-arranged date will be 23rd to 25th September 2022. That should give plenty of time for the vaccine to have fully rolled out round the whole of Europe and for the world to be back to ‘normal’!

We wanted to select a date that we could all be certain of and fix our hopes and excitement to. The event will still be in the same venue in Dortmund and we will still be bringing you the Voyager cast to celebrate their late birthday, as well as many new and old characters from other series!

We are sorry that the pandemic has impacted so badly on public events. We truly miss seeing you all and feedback from the actors is that they also really miss you too! So, let’s all look forward to the new date which we will make the best Destination Star Trek Germany has ever seen!

Thank you for understanding and continuing with your much valued support of us and Star Trek!

For those of you who may have already bought tickets to the convention — whether back in 2020 or in the months since — those will automatically carry over to the new 2022 schedule without any additional action required.

The company is offering vouchers for other Destination Star Trek events, such as the one in London scheduled for this November, in lieu of refunds; if an issued voucher is not used by the end of December 2022, a refund will be issued to ticketholders at that time.

Tickets and more information on the Destination Star Trek: Germany convention, now set for September 22-25, 2022, can be found at the event’s official website.

EXO-6 Reveals New 1:6-Scale STAR TREK: FIRST CONTACT Captain Picard Figure, Preorder Sales Now Open

Three months after 1:6-scale Star Trek character figure company EXO-6 took their first steps into the franchise with a new Lt. Commander Data figure, the company has launched presales for their next entry in the line today: Captain Jean-Luc Picard as seen in Star Trek: First Contact.

EXO-6 revealed the first public images of the highly-detailed character figure this morning. The second release in their Star Trek: First Contact lineup, this new Captain Picard figure replicates the Enterprise-E commander’s look from that second Next Generation feature film — right down to a costume change.

Here’s EXO-6’s full breakdown of its features:

· Fully Articulated Body: More than 30 points of articulation allow the figure to be displayed in multiple dynamic poses, approximately 30 cm tall.

· Realistic Portraits: Picard’s stern expression shows his resolve in taking on the Borg no matter what the cost. Lovingly rendered by a top artist, this excellent likeness of Patrick Stewart as Captain Picard is specially hand-painted.

· Starfleet Duty Uniform: Meticulously researched, this duty uniform matches the pattern and color of the original costume recreated in 1:6 scale. Including the captain’s jacket, captain’s vest, and duty trousers – all exactingly matched to the original costume. Magnets are sewn into the pants so the holsters for the tricorder and phaser can be attached. An authentically scaled communicator badge is permanently affixed to the jacket and the vest. (Vest and jacket cannot be worn at the same time).

· Boots: Soft plastic boots sculpted to match the cut and style of the original movie footwear.

· Display Base: A hexagonal display base featuring the transporter pad will provide additional support for the figure. Two different inserts for the floor of the base can represent the transporter pad or the center of the transporter array.

A close look at the Starfleet accessories paired with the Captain Picard figure.

Like the Data figure, the 1:6-scale First Contact Picard measures about 12″ tall, and includes a number of film-accurate accessories — perfect for fighting back a Borg invasion.

Along with his movie-accurate Starfleet uniform (and that captains-exclusive vest!), this Picard release includes a Starfleet phaser rifle, a Type II hand phaser, a Mark X Starfleet tricorder, as well as several alternate hands for accessory use.

· Type II hand phaser. The phaser can be worn in a black holster that magnetically attaches to his pants.

· TR-590 Tricorder X: This standard tricorder can be opened or worn in a holster.

· Phaser rifle: Type 3B Phaser rifle used by the Enterprise crew to battle the invading Borg.

In addition to the First Contact Picard figure, EXO-6 also announced on social media late last month that they’ll be offering a standalone Enterprise-E captain’s chair replica — scaled to their 1:6 figures — later this year.

So far no additional details about that product are yet available, but we’ll bring you news on that once we know more!

If you’re ready to beam down Captain Picard to your own collection, you can head over to the EXO-6 website now where preorders are open now — the 1:6-scale Star Trek: First Contact figure is retailing for $189.95 (plus shipping), with a required, non-refundable $20 deposit due up front.

Will you be recruiting Captain Picard to your Starfleet crew? Let us know in the comments below!

DESTINATION STAR TREK: LONDON Convention Team Commits to November 2021 Event Schedule

Amidst more than a year of date changes, delays, pivots to virtual events, and flat-out cancellations, it’s been a long time since any of us have taken the trip to a Star Trek happening — but fans in the UK can now mark their calendars with ink.

The team behind the European Destination Star Trek convention series announced today that they’re committing to hold the 2021 Destination Star Trek: London celebration this November — a date tentatively announced last September when 2020’s event had to be delayed due to the ongoing pandemic.

They shared the news today, locking in the November 12 – 14 schedule, with a little help from Star Trek: Voyager veteran Robert Picardo.

The Star Trek: Voyager documentary team has been looking with hopeful eyes to the London event in hopes of filming a Voyager cast reunion — so this will certainly be good news for that production, on top of all the local Star Trek fans so eager to get back into the convention feeling.

While that event is far enough away that most of you planning to attend should hopefully have ample opportunity to be vaccinated, there’s still a curious lack of news about the impending Destination Star Trek: Germany convention — curiously still on the books for a late June 2021 date.

We’ve reached out to the Destination Star Trek team to see what’s up with the Germany plans, as we’re within two months of that scheduled event.

MAY 7 UPDATE: The Destination Star Trek: Germany convention has now been rescheduled for September 2022.

Creation Entertainment’s The 55-Year Mission Tour convention — the new name for the former “Official Star Trek Convention” held in Las Vegas each August — is still on track (as of this writing) for its August 11-15 schedule, as the local Nevada government plans to continue reopening efforts as we head into summer.

(That said, it wasn’t until June 2020 that last year’s Creation event was pushed out from its original date — so there’s still a chance things may change for the Las Vegas situation.)

Creation is also still promoting their September convention in New Jersey, however similar regional events in Vancouver and Florida have both been cancelled for that same month.

ReedPop’s October New York Comic Con event is expected to be a hybrid in-person/virtual happening this fall, but with the massive news released at First Contact Day — and a likely repeat of last year’s Star Trek Day event in September — we don’t expect too much Trek at NYCC this year.

Especially with the ViacomCBS team gearing up for next April’s Star Trek: Mission Chicago convention, which is surely to be the biggest in-person Star Trek event in years.

We’ll bring you more news on all the Star Trek events happening this year as the months roll on — in the meantime, if you’re headed to London in November, you can score tickets to the Destination Star Trek: London event now.

WeeklyTrek Podcast #139 — Burton Hints at Future PICARD Appearance, Yeoh Says Georgiou’s Not Done Yet

On this week’s episode of WeeklyTrek, brought to you in partnership between The Tricorder Transmissions Podcast Network and TrekCore, host Alex Perry is joined by Heather Kirby to discuss all the latest Star Trek news.

This week, Alex and his guest discuss the following stories from TrekCore and around the web:

In addition, stick around to listen to Heather’s theory about potential crossover between the current TV shows in the next Star Trek movie, and Alex’s theory about whether we might hear about a premiere date for Star Trek: Prodigy within the next two weeks!

WeeklyTrek is available to subscribe and download each week on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, YouTube, and Spotify — and we’ll be sharing the details of each new episode right here on TrekCore each week if you’re simply just looking to listen in from the web.

Do you have a wish or theory you’d like to share on the show? Tweet to Alex at @WeeklyTrek, or email us with your thoughts about wishes, theories, or anything else about the latest in Star Trek news!

The Wand Company Shares Design and 3D Printing Insights Into Their Classic STAR TREK Tricorder Replica

We’ve been paying close attention to the exciting development behind The Wand Company’s take on the classic Star Trek tricorder, the third entry their Original Series “Landing Party” line of prop replicas.

This month, the company showed off some very interesting looks behind the curtain as they continue the path forward towards the product’s final release.

A look ‘under the hood,’ revealing tech details of the upper section. (The Wand Company)

In their first April update, the company shares some of the detail behind taking their reference images, photographs, and scans of the original surviving Original Series tricorder prop, and using all of that combined data into a new digital model for 2021 manufacturing.

The high-resolution tricorder 3D scan data gives us an extraordinary opportunity to create a detailed and accurate replica that should… look and feel as much as possible like a real piece of equipment that had been issued to an Enterprise officer.

However, it is not as simple as just using the generated scan data to make a production product, although it is an excellent jumping-off point for our design.

For The Wand Company, the finished replica should not only follow the external dimensions and geometry of the original prop as closely as possible but also fulfil a number of other important criteria: it has to be manufacturable in volume, invisibly contain the components needed for it to be functional, be robust enough to be enjoyed as intended and used in one’s quarters and during away missions and, most importantly, create a rich experience for the owner which immerses them in the optimistic expanses of the Star Trek universe.

Naturally, decisions have to be made about how the tricorder will fit together and how everything needed to make it function can be squeezed into the form that was determined by Wah Chang, [but] even with a modern LCD, still a crowded place for the functions that we want to pack into it in 2021.

Inside the rear of the tricorder’s top and midsections. (The Wand Company)

In addition to a number of shared images of their digital 3D model of the new classic Trek tricorder prop replica, the team also went into fine detail about the challenges faced with recreating the handmade, original prop — with dimensions meant to by symmetrical, yet are warped or damaged after decades — as a new design capable of being mass-produced with current factory materials and techniques, preserving Wah Chang’s original look and styling in the process.

When studying the prop it was clear that some of the panels had become warped and one side panel was completely loose from its original position. All this is captured by the scan and that data is all imported into the CAD – the good, bad and the ugly. However, because I had also physically examined the hero prop, I was able to ascertain which aspects of it were part of the original design intent and which areas had become damaged or misshapen during the hero prop’s history.

With the scan geometry in CAD, I was able to make multiple sections through the data as well as overlaying what were intended to be symmetrical parts, for example the two side panels, so that I could then compare each part directly to find coherent features. Needless to say, there was quite a lot of this to work through which took a great deal of care and time to get to the model ready for production.

Bringing the ‘disc storage’ section of the tricorder to life. (The Wand Company)

In an interesting development, The Wand Company also intends their tricorder prop replica to feature an ejecting series of data discs, where round tiles are able to be removed from the central storage bay using a servo mechanism — adding functionality to part of the prop only seen as ‘static’ on-camera.

The middle compartment of the hero prop, along with all the original details, was long-removed.

However, I could see the dried glue and the edges of the remnants where certain parts of the middle section had been held. Combining this with the scan data and original photos, I was able to more precisely calculate the sizing and geometry of those missing middle features. This allowed me to recreate those elements that were absent from the hero tricorder.

[One of the most rewarding parts of this project was] designing a working rack of removable data discs that would fit within the original geometry that Wah Chang conceptualized. (We will discuss this aspect of the design in more detail in a future post.)

A 3D-printed prototype tricorder, with TWC’s communicator and phaser releases. (The Wand Company)

The company’s second April update focuses on their use of 3D printing technology in the tricorder’s prototype development stages, a vital process in their building and refinement of the prop replica’s final design.

Our tricorder CAD was a constantly evolving mechanical design for well over a year, as we pulled together all the elements that we wanted to fit inside the skin of this iconic prop.

Several of the early mechanical concepts required physical testing before being developed into a design that could be manufactured and 3D printing was a key part of this process. 3D printing allows us to quickly produce real parts in practically any shape we like, which could be difficult or even impossible to injection mould.

This is helpful, as we can get a concept made quickly which allows the parts to be tested in mechanisms before being tweaked and developed into models that are designed as production parts. Once the mechanical concept is tested, then the parts have to be designed so that they will be manufacturable in an injection mould tool with the associated limitations and essential draft angles.

They also explained how all of the components for the tricorder went through multiple iterations in the design phase, using different materials for various testing processes.

For those of you who enjoy 3D printing as hobby, there are a bunch of interesting deep-dive technical details about their trial-and-error work, the machines and materiel they use, and so forth — read the full post for that fascinating insight!

To minimise the potential for changes this late on in the process and also, from the earliest point possible, to find out if the CAD design would work in the real world, each of the components have been 3D printed, often multiple times.

3D printing the tricorder has been critical in realising the design and understanding fully how it will fit together, be built on the production line and actually work in the hands of a user. Seeing the geometry turned into real 3D printed components assembled, all mechanically slotting into each other, truly brings the tricorder to life.

3D printing can only go so far, of course; while extremely helpful in the development of each component, it also helps the factory which will be building the final product understand what needs to be produced when the design is “locked” for the big day.

It’s not only us that need to see and feel the tricorder: our factory also makes use of rapid prototyping and Stratasys PolyJet 3D printing machines to get a better understanding of what they are going to have to manufacture.

A fully working prototype is essential for the factory to test the fit and build sequence and make sure that the CAD really works before tool cutting is started.

There are many aspects of the design that are very difficult to gauge from just looking at CAD on a screen or by testing functions with simulation software – for example, how bundles of cables are routed, what the detents on the hood opening action feel like in operation, or how the range of internal state sensors perform together.

It is usual for these factory models to be expensive and time-consuming to build and, more often than not, the process is repeated a number of times whilst the design is refined as issues are discovered and ironed out in subsequent revisions, which then also need testing. They are, however, a very necessary step towards full manufacture.

A 3D printed build along with a ‘skeleton’ of the final design. (The Wand Company)

In addition to the plastic material which the final tricorder replica will contain as 3D-printed parts, there are also a great number of metal components and assembly equipment (springs, screws, pins, etc.) and hundreds of electronic bits to help it actually function.

The tricorder is constructed from a range of different materials, and in addition to 68 injection moulded parts which can be 3D printed, there are 22 metal parts, a number of different sized screws, bolts, springs, and magnets, a hand-stitched leatherette strap, and more than 350 electronic components assembled on to six printed circuit boards.

Where it is easier or more accurate to do so, many of the metal parts are created using traditional CNC machining, laser or waterjet cutting. For the tricorder’s side frame plates, we had access to a laser cutter which allowed us to initially cut acrylic sheet to shape to create quick prototype models in order to test our initial design concepts.

As soon as the design had been refined, the side plates were sent out to an external fabricator to be laser cut from aluminium.

With every new technical detail revealed, we get more and more excited about the final product The Wand Company will eventually be releasing — so if you’re as interested in this project as we are, keep checking back to TrekCore for all the latest updates!

If you’re interested in this classic Star Trek tricorder prop replica, you can register on The Wand Company’s website for more news on the project, and preorder availability, as things move closer to fruition.

WeeklyTrek Podcast #138 — Toronto Tests STAR TREK’s Pandemic Protocols

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On this week’s episode of WeeklyTrek, brought to you in partnership between The Tricorder Transmissions Podcast Network and TrekCore, host Alex Perry is joined by Jamie McGregor to discuss all the latest Star Trek news.

This week, Alex and his guest discuss the following stories from TrekCore and around the web:

In addition, stick around to listen to Jamie’s wish for the next Star Trek movie  — and Alex and Jamie’s discussion on the poorly-handled Twitter announcement from Michael Dorn about “returning to Starfleet,” leading many to (wrongly) assume he was coming to the next season of Star Trek: Picard — but instead, he’s just doing voice work the for Star Trek Legends mobile game.

WeeklyTrek is available to subscribe and download each week on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, YouTube, and Spotify — and we’ll be sharing the details of each new episode right here on TrekCore each week if you’re simply just looking to listen in from the web.

Do you have a wish or theory you’d like to share on the show? Tweet to Alex at @WeeklyTrek, or email us with your thoughts about wishes, theories, or anything else about the latest in Star Trek news!

REVIEW — Hero Collector’s STAR TREK II: THE WRATH OF KHAN Regula I Station Model

Located deep in the Mutara Sector of the Beta Quadrant, the Federation research outpost Regula I served as the base of operations for Project Genesis — and now this top-secret facility has joined Hero Collector’s line of Star Trek models!

Originally designed by Andy Probert for Star Trek: The Motion Picture, the starbase studio model debuted as the Earth-based orbital office complex, shown in an inverted position compared to all future uses. Flipped vertically and with some other configuration changes, the Regula I station design first seen in The Wrath of Khan would go on to be used in several other appearances, including a number of times in Star Trek: The Next Generation.

After some final modifications — including the removal of the brown and tan ‘barrel’ lower section — the studio model would later appear as Admiral Ross’ Starbase 375, where Captain Sisko and the Defiant crew were stationed after abandoning Deep Space 9 to the Dominion in 2375 (as well as some other DS9-era starbases seen in the latter part of that show’s sixth season).

The studio model seen in “The Motion Picture,” in “The Next Generation,” and in “Deep Space Nine.”

Hero Collector’s new model brings us this station in its Wrath of Khan configuration, a nicely-sized 7-inch replica based upon Carol Marcus’ research facility from that second Star Trek film.

One of the few space station models in the Hero Collector line, the Regula I model is very nicely detailed for its size, and is produced in the company’s standard mix of die-cast metal and injected-molded plastic material. For this model, the top section of the model is the metal component, while the middle and lower sections (and top antenna) is all plastic.

Like the Star Trek III Spacedock model before it, the Regula I station includes a ring-shaped display stand, a sturdy support base which adds another few inches to the model’s height when on display — allowing the station so appear to ‘float’ over your tabletop.

The mostly-grey top sections are accented by splashes of light green, yellow, and red around its various sensor cluster and round modules, and the ‘barrels’ feature solid striping in a number of shades of brown, tan, pink, and magenta which are nice details to give some technical feeling to its lower section.

While there are a few nitpicks — the underside of the round central modules don’t have the solid grey paint circles a bit smaller than the studio model, and there is a small amount of misaligned window marking on the top section (an age-old complaint) — there’s really not much to complain about with this one.

It’s just a nice, solid build of an iconic Star Trek space station.

While it’s currently sold out for US sales in Hero Collector’s web shop, the station retails there for $49.99 — and it’s still available as of this writing in the UK, retailing there for £32.99.

We’ll be back soon with a look at more of the Official Starships Collection — but in the meantime, let us know what you think about this model in the comments below!

STAR TREK: DISCOVERY Production Halts After Off-Set COVID Contact; Hiatus Expected to Last Two Weeks

Star Trek: Discovery began production on it’s upcoming fourth season back in November, following strict pandemic protocols and safety measures to ensure the well-being of cast and crew — but as conditions in the Toronto area continue to trend dangerously, the show began an unplanned two-week shutdown last night after possible COVID-19 exposure.

Reported first by Deadline on Friday evening, Discovery production was halted after a “Zone A individual” — meaning someone who operates within primary on-set activities — was identified as being possibly exposed to a COVID-positive individual during off-set hours.

As Deadline reports:

Out of an abundance of caution, production officially halted yesterday. Which means, right now, Discovery is penciled in to turn the lights and phasers back on around May 6.

The decision to stop production came swiftly after a Zone A individual on Discovery came in close proximity earlier this week with someone who had tested positive for Covid-19.

The infected individual was unrelated to the show and the contact occurred away from Discovery’s Pinewood Studios set… the matter was detected through the contact tracing system widely employed in Canada’s largest city and elsewhere in the province of Ontario.

People operating within “Zone A” on a film or television production, as the SAG-AFTRA union protocols define, include on-camera talent and background actors, those who operate without social distancing and without the use of personal protective equipment (masks, etc.)

Zone A is any perimeter within which activity occurs without physical distancing or the use of PPE and includes all principal performers and background actors. This is the Zone with the most *potential* for transmission because some activity will take place in which PPE is removed. The number of people in Zone A will be severely limited.

If you are cleared for Zone A, you will likely be tested three times a week at a minimum; when circumstances require—such as extensive intimate scenes or scenes involving extreme physical exertion—testing may be daily.

While Deadline reports that the “Zone A individual” involved in this incident (who is currently quarantining for 14 days) encountered the COVID-positive individual away from the Discovery set, and has not been back to the set since exposure was identified — but the Secret Hideout production at Toronto’s Pinewood Studios decided to shut down filming through May 6 just to be safe.

The Star Trek: Strange New Worlds production was also (slightly) impacted by COVID exposure last week, however their incident occurred with an episodic guest star and a few members of the costume department — and did not require a production shutdown.

Back in October, Star Trek franchise boss Alex Kurtzman spoke a bit about the challenges of filming during pandemic times.

Everything is different. Everything is slower, between testing and… you know, your set doesn’t function like the set used to function.

There are groups that are vetted by the unions; ‘pods’ within the groups themselves; there are rotations in and out — of people — so that if somebody gets sick in your pod, the pod just gets removed and another pod gets pushed in but it doesn’t infect the whole group.

It is a massive, massive, militarized operation… but there’s nothing more important than the safety of our crew, and with things being slower, I think all networks and studios are recognizing that shows now become exponentially more expensive… not because of the budgets of the shows themselves, but because of the PPE required to keep the crews safe, which was never factored into the show budget.

All of us, every showrunner is dealing with having to face that down and figure out how to still produce a show of quality while also dealing with that, that very real issue… there are so many things we’re learning, [and] there’s no show that’s not worth keeping people safe for — that’s the goal.

[…]

I will say, honestly, that the whole rule is how few people can you have on set — in terms of who absolutely needs to be there. There should be no extraneous [people] or anything on set… the number one rule is just, “Who doesn’t need to be there?”

Check-in and testing direction signs spotted in Toronto by a local fan last fall.

Currently, the fourth season of Star Trek: Discovery is expected to debut in towards the end of 2021; at present it is not known if this unplanned two-week shutdown will impact that timetable.

Keep coming back to TrekCore for all the newest updates on the franchise!

Hero Collector Adds STAR TREK: PICARD’s Romulan Forces to its OFFICIAL STARSHIPS Fleet in July

We’re back today with an exclusive first look at July 2021’s new additions to the Official Starships Collection, as our friends at Hero Collector continue to expand the Star Trek model fleet!

It’ll be a short reveal this month, as the plans for July include only two new starships — compared to three for May and three for June — but they’re each new designs never rendered in model form previously.

First, from the world of Star Trek: Picard comes the new angular Romulan vessel seen in that series; most notably patrolling the abandoned Borg Cube in “Remembrance,” but also seen in “Maps and Legends,” “Nepenthe,” and “Broken Pieces.”

ROMULAN VESSEL (Issue 5) — A new class of Romulan starship, this sharp-edged, angular warbird was employed by both the Romulan Free State and the secretive Tal Shiar intelligence agency, as they exploited the secrets of The Artifact… a vast, dormant Borg Cube!

This station measures about 8.5 inches wide, and will retail at $54.95 / €49.99 / £39.99.

*   *   *   *   *

The next entry in the Star Trek Online series of starship models is the A.F.S. Khitomer Battlecruiser (CSN-01), the first hybrid starship of combined Federation-Klingon Allied Fleet Service — including a Klingon-style secondary hull and Federation-style saucer section.

A.F.S. KHITOMER BATTLECRUISER (Issue 16) — A prototype vessel available to players in Star Trek Online, the Khitomer-class Battlecruiser was the first ship launched by the Khitomer Alliance’s new Allied Fleet Service (AFS). Designed jointly by the Alliance’s members, the Khitomer fuses elements of Starfleet and Klingon starship design for a true hybrid vessel.

This prototype starship measures about 5.5 inches long, and will retail at $29.95 / €24.99 / £19.99.

Stick around for looks at more from Hero Collector and the Official Starships Collection, as well as reviews of the XL-sized, three-nacelled USS Enterprise-D from “All Good Things…” and and the Regula One station from The Wrath of Khan in the coming days!