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Star Trek: The Next Generation Technical Manual

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The Star Trek: The Next Generation® Technical Manual, written by Rick Sternbach and Michael Okuda, the technical advisors to Star Trek: The Next Generation, provides a comprehensive schematization of a Galaxy-class starship. From the bridge to the shuttlebays, from the transporter room to crews' quarters, this book provides a never-before-seen glimpse at the inner, intricate workings of the most incredible starship ever conceived.

Full of diagrams, technical schematics, and ship's plans, the Star Trek: The Next Generation Technical Manual also takes a detailed look at the principles behind Star Trek®'s awesome technology -- from phasers to warp drive to the incredible holodeck.

184 pages, Paperback

First published October 1, 1991

About the author

Rick Sternbach

17 books5 followers

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5 stars
1,046 (45%)
4 stars
723 (31%)
3 stars
438 (19%)
2 stars
83 (3%)
1 star
15 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 43 reviews
Profile Image for Anne.
Author 6 books32 followers
June 14, 2012
Heh, this was my Bible back in the day before Pocket Books stopped accepting TNG manuscripts. Ask me about Heisenberg compensators. Go on, ask me.
Profile Image for Michael.
506 reviews26 followers
August 30, 2016
This thing is too geeked out even for my geekiness, but it is what it says it is, a technical manual. And for that I give it 5-stars for detail and thoroughness. An entire book of this:

"At Warp factors 1-4 the injectors fire a low frequencies, between 30 Hz and 40 Hz, and remain open for short periods, between 25 ns and 30 ns." and so on.

There are sporadic anecdotes that are interesting. Patrick Stewart asked how a warp drive worked. He was told such a device was beyond known physics. He said "Nonsense, all you have to do is say 'Engage.'"
Profile Image for Chris Maguire.
8 reviews1 follower
December 28, 2019
This is quite possibly my favorite book. I’ve read it countless times. Got my recent copy off of eBay. It’s such a dorky book and a great piece of technical fiction.
Profile Image for Daniel Kukwa.
4,339 reviews104 followers
February 5, 2011
Althought a few later tech manuals would supercede it, this remains the book that blew open the doors on behind-the-scene verisimilitude. If Star Trek's Enterprise-D was real, this would be THE cadet's guide to the ship.
Profile Image for Heath.
515 reviews4 followers
December 29, 2009
A must own for the Trek Geek. Mine has been on the bookshelf for the longest time.
Profile Image for Danny.
188 reviews
October 3, 2019
this was a childhood treasure for me, I pored over every page of it, and wanted more. the interesting designs coming up. how it all worked. I should get a new copy
Profile Image for F.D. Green.
Author 3 books1 follower
March 20, 2019
I am writing a novel. In my novel, I have a starship crashing. I totally wrote it wrong. The Star Trek: The Next Generation Technical Manual solved that problem for me.
Profile Image for Stephanie R..
187 reviews
February 2, 2018
As a fan of TNG, I am so happy this book exists so that not all of the books are about TOS. It really reminds you how HUGE the 1701-D was compared to the 1701, and illustrates its longer-term mission with thousands of people living on the ship for an extended period of time. In fact, you could say that Starfleet's greatest accomplishment was not scientific or tactical, but one of management. How else could you get a crew of hundreds or thousands together on a ship for months or years, not always in contact with HQ, and have them all performing near 100%, and not have a disaster? The part about how the ship was built was fascinating. It took 20 years from the Galaxy Class Project's approval in 2343, to the extensive testing starting in 2357 once hull integrity was complete, to the Enterprise's official commission at Utopia Planitia Fleet Yard on October 4 2363. I also liked the descriptions of how the transporter and phasers work, though the replicators could use some more detail. It can be hard to tell how much of it is real and how much is fantasy. It is a joy to read this; it reads like a textbook except there is proper spelling and grammar, a simpler sentence structure, and the subject matter is actually interesting. The pictures and diagrams are in black and white but they are so clear you won't mind.
Profile Image for Corl.
30 reviews
May 22, 2017
I think I got this book as a teenager, but in a move I lost it and didn't know until much later when I watched all of the Star Trek shows and wanted to dig up the book. I wound up compelled to buy it from a bookstore.
It's kinda cool to see all the thought that went into creating this fictional star ship and all the fluff for it, especially after watching the show. Kind of a cool way to continue enjoying the franchise again without repeat watching.
Profile Image for Derrick Feinman.
20 reviews
July 9, 2017
Along with the philosophy the technology of Star Trek is one of the best parts. I have always loved how Star Trek attempts to illustrate the application of scientific theories to really awesome technology. This book explains how these things work, how they fit, and make one understand the significance of some of the mundane comments and discussions on the show. If only writers would read this before writing....
Profile Image for Christopher Lutz.
424 reviews
December 12, 2018
I’ll admit, I didn’t read every single word, due to the fact that this technical manual went to such a crazy level of detail. I don’t really need to know every statistic on every moment of a transport cycle, or the exact alignment of the warp core of the Enterprise-D, but I’m extremely happy to own the book that can tell me that and more. I love world building and learning how fictional technologies work, and this book is that to the extreme.
28 reviews
March 9, 2020
Not Bad But a Bit Damaged

Good translation overall but note that almost all of the pictures are incorrectly labeled. Egregious example is a PADD showing up as a shunt and an isolinear chip showing up as a PADD. However, if you really enjoy TNG, this is worth a read. It’s written as if it really is the 24th century and someone is reading up on the Enterprise’s technical specifications.
Profile Image for Paul Hartzog.
169 reviews12 followers
October 24, 2021
Great and fun read. Even has some technical info I needed. The only downside is that it's old and so it's printed on old paper with an old binding and is not like the shiny new glossy illustrated books you tend to find nowadays (like all the "Art of" this movie or that...)

I loved it so much I bought a copy to re-read !
737 reviews4 followers
April 13, 2022
Imaginatively written, I enjoyed turning the pages, reading more closely here and there, but overall this is definitely a book for skimming, except for the true Trekker (Trekkie?). I liked that the authors spoke out directly to the reader here and there to explain matters to those not fully initiated.
Profile Image for Zachery Tyson.
50 reviews77 followers
July 6, 2019
Yes I read this many years ago, and yes it was amazing. Would read again.
Profile Image for Nostri.
2 reviews
October 23, 2022
Loved this as kid when I got it, still love it now going back through it. Really interesting mix of in-universe write-ups of things and asides from the production of the TV show.
Profile Image for Aperoki.
11 reviews13 followers
March 23, 2017
An absolute delight of my childhood, I would pour over the diagrams and descriptions and dream of the stars
Profile Image for Mark Clarkson.
165 reviews2 followers
December 21, 2019
A treasure trove of information for any Star Trek enthusiast, I've had this copy for over 25 years, and still check it out on a regular basis
Profile Image for Erik.
322 reviews18 followers
January 11, 2017
The best Star Trek technical manual ever made from the source himself. Incredibly detailed, covers everything you 'd want and then more. Especially loved all the projected USS-1701-E designs!!

All other technical manuals that came after this unfortunately paled in comparison - they got dumber, with just way more pictures.
Profile Image for Tor.com Publishing.
110 reviews500 followers
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November 10, 2015
This book really confused me when I was younger-- it was like a D&D sourcebook, for a television show? It spawned an interest in all kinds of apocryphal writing; I can't get enough of these kinds of coffee table books, even as an adult. --MK
Profile Image for Bret.
Author 6 books15 followers
July 18, 2008
Amusing at the time I first saw it, but since then I've come to the realization that even I am not so much of a nerd to truly appreciate the time and effort required for a book of this type.
47 reviews1 follower
October 9, 2008
it may hurt my street cred to admit this in public. But i own this book, and i have read it from cover to cover.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 43 reviews

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