Toggle menu
Toggle personal menu
Not logged in
Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits.

Core command: Difference between revisions

From Battlestar Wiki, the free, open content Battlestar Galactica encyclopedia and episode guide
Joe Beaudoin Jr. (talk | contribs)
m Text replacement - " -- " to "—"
Joe Beaudoin Jr. (talk | contribs)
refactoring
Line 1: Line 1:
[[Image:Galactica Bridge 05.jpg|thumb|right|''Galactica'''s bridge.]]
'''Core Command''' (colloquially known as "'''the bridge'''") is the central nerve center of a [[Colonial]] [[battlestar (TOS)|battlestar]], organizing, executing and overseeing operations aboard ship as directed by the commander and their operatives.
'''Core Command''' is the central nerve center of a [[Colonial]] [[battlestar (TOS)|battlestar]]. It is the bridge of the ship, where the ship's commander oversees operations.


Egg-shaped, narrowing toward the bow, Core Command is separated into three tiers.  The upper tier is a small rotating platform.  It has a command chair and a keyboard and [[scanner]] setup.  It is often manned by either {{TOS|Adama}}, {{TOS|Tigh}} or [[Omega]] on ''Galactica''.  The middle tier consists of various scanners and stations, surrounding the room in a ring. People walking into core command enter at this middle level. {{TOS|Athena}} often mans a scanner at this level.
Egg-shaped, narrowing toward the bow, Core Command is separated into three tiers.  The upper tier is a small rotating platform.  It has a command chair and a keyboard and [[scanner]] setup.  It is often manned by either {{TOS|Adama}}, {{TOS|Tigh}} or [[Omega]] on ''[[Galactica (TOS)|Galactica]]''.  The middle tier consists of various scanners and stations, surrounding the room in a ring. People walking into core command enter at this middle level. {{TOS|Athena}} often mans a scanner at this level.
[[Image:Galactica Bridge 03.jpg|thumb|right|The stations of the Bridge.]]
 
[[Image:Galactica Bridge 04.jpg|thumb|right|The display grid.]]
Also on the middle level, immediately forward of the Command Chair, is a two-place combined helm/astrogation console with joysticks<ref>The joysticks share the same design used in the {{TOS|Viper}} cockpit, including the Turbo, IM, and Fire buttons.</ref> at both positions to steer ''Galactica'' through the three spatial dimensions.
Also on the middle level, immediately forward of the Command Chair, is a two-place combined helm/astrogation console with joysticks (the same design as used in the {{TOS|Viper}} cockpit, including the Turbo, IM, and Fire buttons) at both positions to steer ''Galactica'' through the three spatial dimensions.


The starboard side of the middle level has a chamber extending outward from the level's circumference, with a number of computer or communications consoles staffed by standing personnel&mdash;these are not seated positions.  The bottom tier is recessed in the middle of the room and is below the level of the forward window.  There are several stations on this level.  [[Rigel]] coordinates {{TOS|Viper}} launches from a station on this level.
The starboard side of the middle level has a chamber extending outward from the level's circumference, with a number of computer or communications consoles staffed by standing personnel&mdash;these are not seated positions.  The bottom tier is recessed in the middle of the room and is below the level of the forward window.  There are several stations on this level.  [[Rigel]] coordinates {{TOS|Viper}} launches from a station on this level.
Line 30: Line 28:


</gallery>
</gallery>
 
== Technical Journal Supplement ==
[[Realm Press]], a former licensee circa 1998, commissioned the [[Colonial Technical Journal, Volume 1|''Colonial Technical Journal, Volume 1'']]. While [[non-canonical]], it endeavored to make sense of the technologies seen and referenced in the [[Original Series]]. Previews of the journal were released in earlier issues of their comic book series before the company dissolved, which include computer-generated renders of Core Command with diagrams and notations.<gallery>
File:Galactica Bridge 01.jpg
File:Galactica Bridge 02.jpg
File:Galactica Bridge 03.jpg
File:Galactica Bridge 04.jpg
File:Galactica Bridge 05.jpg
</gallery>
 
== References ==
== References ==
   
   

Revision as of 17:02, 14 October 2024

Core Command (colloquially known as "the bridge") is the central nerve center of a Colonial battlestar, organizing, executing and overseeing operations aboard ship as directed by the commander and their operatives.

Egg-shaped, narrowing toward the bow, Core Command is separated into three tiers. The upper tier is a small rotating platform. It has a command chair and a keyboard and scanner setup. It is often manned by either Adama, Tigh or Omega on Galactica. The middle tier consists of various scanners and stations, surrounding the room in a ring. People walking into core command enter at this middle level. Athena often mans a scanner at this level.

Also on the middle level, immediately forward of the Command Chair, is a two-place combined helm/astrogation console with joysticks[1] at both positions to steer Galactica through the three spatial dimensions.

The starboard side of the middle level has a chamber extending outward from the level's circumference, with a number of computer or communications consoles staffed by standing personnel—these are not seated positions. The bottom tier is recessed in the middle of the room and is below the level of the forward window. There are several stations on this level. Rigel coordinates Viper launches from a station on this level.

During a battle, the commanding officer can order that the shield be activated, with the command 'positive shield': it drops down to protect the Core Command forward window from direct attack by laser fire or ramming (TOS: "The Living Legend, Part II").

Behind the Scenes

The set for core command was the most expensive one used in the series, featuring over $500,000 U.S.D. worth of equipment provided by the measuring equipment manufacturer Tektronix,[2] including a large number of oscilloscopes (studio publicity handouts quoted in magazines at the time often claimed that it had cost a million dollars to construct Galactica's). According to Battlestar Galactica's PR representative, Joe Santley, the computers were run by "a central computer and cued into the actors' lines".[2]

The helm/astrogation console had some working switches which altered patterns of lights on the console: these switches were protected with wire guards similar to those used in NASA Gemini and Apollo spacecraft. Keypads not actually connected to the "central computer" mentioned immediately above were molded solid from vacuum-formed plastic and could not be depressed. The use of vacuum-formed plastic also explained the non-depressible Turbo, IM, and Fire buttons on the helm joysticks, as they were cast from the same mold as the Viper joysticks.

The set was entirely self-contained: when an actor walked into Core Command, he or she was literally walking in from a bare soundstage outside the set—the entrances to Core Command shown in the program were the only way to enter the set, and were wide enough to accommodate a camera, cinematographer, and camera operator.

There was no glass in the forward window so as to not to reflect the studio lights. A black velvet curtain represented "space" with varying-sized disks of glass-beaded reflective material glued to it for "stars". There was a roughly three-foot distance between the window opening and the curtain, leaving room for a catwalk: occasionally one could witness through the window a uniformed Universal Studios security guard on patrol walking between the window and the "stars"!

When not filming, a small A-folded sign saying "Don't sit here!" was left on the seat of the command chair.

Related Imagery

Technical Journal Supplement

Realm Press, a former licensee circa 1998, commissioned the Colonial Technical Journal, Volume 1. While non-canonical, it endeavored to make sense of the technologies seen and referenced in the Original Series. Previews of the journal were released in earlier issues of their comic book series before the company dissolved, which include computer-generated renders of Core Command with diagrams and notations.

References

  1. The joysticks share the same design used in the Viper cockpit, including the Turbo, IM, and Fire buttons.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Meyers, Richard (August 1978). "Get Ready For... BATTLE STAR "GALACTICA"". Starlog: 52-53.

See Also