3D Tour of Jules Verne's Nautilus * Scifisteve (2 of 2)

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 8 июл 2024
  • Created in Lightwave / AfterAffects this is a tour of the Verne's Nautilus. This should present the Nautilus in 3D giving all the rooms a feel of height, width and depth. All the rooms are joined and fit within the body of the Nautilus. For additional detail please go to my web site www.scifisteve.com.
  • КиноКино

Комментарии • 29

  • @undersee604
    @undersee604 7 лет назад +2

    Nicely done ,Tom Scherman who I knew would have enjoyed the tour. Dan Kachur

  • @starclone4
    @starclone4 4 года назад +1

    Love the Nautilus !!!!

  • @GabrielPerboni
    @GabrielPerboni 4 года назад +2

    Preeeeeeeeetty cool, man! I'm going blind and listening to audiobooks are a great way to keep "reading". I'm glad I cloud see a little bit of the Nautilus before everything goes black. Thanks for sharing your work... sorry for the broken English (;

  • @richardlamer3910
    @richardlamer3910 2 года назад

    Love your work.

  • @3dartistguy
    @3dartistguy 12 лет назад +1

    WOW! THis is AWESOME! Really great 3d Modeling and animation work!

  • @craigbrowning9448
    @craigbrowning9448 3 года назад

    Harper Goff, who design many aspects of this craft also designed the plProtius for Fantastic Voyage as well as the Monorail trains at Disneyland.

  • @mattmilsop4003
    @mattmilsop4003 5 лет назад +1

    This is AMAZING!!!

  • @SavageFitz07
    @SavageFitz07 10 лет назад +2

    This is so cool. Only problem I saw with it was in the first part. There is a rear window in the deck house that faces the outer deck of the submarine. It's where Captain Nemo watches his three "guests" as he dives the boat in the film. But other than that can't really complain about the tour.

  • @Shipwright1918
    @Shipwright1918 4 года назад

    Technically not a steam pump, but a compound reciprocating steam engine. A little unusual in this case as it's turning a set of electric generators which both provide electrical power for the ship and spin the propeller via electric motors instead of just driving the ship directly.
    All in all it's not too different from the propulsion plant of the SS Normandie, which used steam turbines hooked up to electric motors, with conventional steam boilers burning oil to provide the steam. But then turbines hadn't been invented yet in the Nautilus' day.

  • @johntremonti9873
    @johntremonti9873 9 лет назад +5

    This was really cool. Was there a specific set of plans, schematics or pictures that you used as a reference?

  • @craigbrowning9448
    @craigbrowning9448 3 года назад

    Also on the Pipe-Organ, on most Organs, the pipes are supported into their Windchests with Gravity. Many Metal pipes are made from Lead Ore and are sometimes tied in place from support racks. Some High Pressure Organs (think Robert Hope-Jones) has clips on the Base of the Pipes to keep them from Blowing out of the Chests.
    Sometimes Reed Organs (which are more roadworthy and probably Seaworthy largely because they seldom need tuning) have fake pipe facades.
    Around the time of Jules Vern writing this book Thaddeus Cahill built an electric instrument called a Telharmonium, which was the precursor of the Hammond Organ. The main difference was it had a Tone Generator system that was housed in a huge warehouse since Amplification had yet to be invented.
    I believe that the Console Disney built was connected to a Reed Organ (anecdotal).

  • @Scifisteve1954
    @Scifisteve1954  10 лет назад +2

    In Tour 1 of 2 look carefully (time stamp :39 seconds) as the iron shield is up.
    But good eye.

    • @davidgroover7963
      @davidgroover7963 10 лет назад

      Hello, I am making a Nautilus music video. I am seeing If I could use some of the stuff though your tour? I would have a special thanks to you if we could :)

    • @davidgroover7963
      @davidgroover7963 10 лет назад

      email me davidgroover@comcast.net

    • @Scifisteve1954
      @Scifisteve1954  3 месяца назад

      My site is clearly in spired by 20,000 leagues. And it was atomic

  • @Charlie-dn3ni
    @Charlie-dn3ni 7 лет назад +1

    This is really cool. Could you do one for the outside of the ship and maybe an animated map of where they went on the journey.

  • @wolfyk95
    @wolfyk95 11 лет назад +3

    Awesome rendering again! I never seen the disney movie but in the book it's electric, not nuclear. There was also a giant library.

  • @rickd248
    @rickd248 8 лет назад +1

    I tried to go to your web site but it doesn't seem to be working. Any ideas? Great tour!!!! Lot's of work went into this, thanks!

  • @williebowen1043
    @williebowen1043 3 года назад

    Please do the SEAVIEW Submarine and Flying Sub from Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea TV series.

  • @doltBmB
    @doltBmB Год назад

    Excuse me but I believe the nautilus power system was "hydro-electric" (whatever that is) and not nuclear. I think even though nuclear may make more sense to modern eyes, this detail should be respected in any authentic recreation of the ship.

  • @albertobeto5362
    @albertobeto5362 3 года назад

    Is the interior and the exterior, in Disney original model compared to Disney original set, matchable? It's not always easy for a film to make everything, sets & scale models, in the very same blueprint. For example, in Star Trek The Motion Picture (1979) the recreation deck, the largest deck on the ship. do not fit to the ship area it is supposed to be, since the exterior hull have a curvature in the bottom that would not allow the recreation deck to perfect fit on it. I wonder if the Nautilus have some issues like that, like if some interior sets do not fit in the size of the ship. May I ask your help to solve my doubt?

  • @williebowen1043
    @williebowen1043 3 года назад

    THANKS DISNEY ENTERTAINMENT FOR MAKING 20- THOUSAND LEAGUE. INTO A LIVE ACTION MOVIE.

  • @heru-deshet359
    @heru-deshet359 6 лет назад

    Seems to me that the crew and Nemo would be about 5'6" tall weighing about 110 lbs to move around all those small and tight spaces.

  • @happyfox711
    @happyfox711 Год назад

    Nice job. But in the book, it's not nuclear, it runs on hydrogen.

  • @easternsuneasternsun171
    @easternsuneasternsun171 3 месяца назад

    In the book it wasnt nuclear powered

  • @tubekulose
    @tubekulose 11 лет назад +1

    I wonder if any Frenchman would be able to identify even one French name in this tube (so, so Americanly pronounced) :-)

  • @j.s.connolly8579
    @j.s.connolly8579 4 года назад

    For the most part this is very well done. However there IS some issues. You totally omitted the rear window and table in the Wheel House. The Salon is too small and is missing a door and ALOT of the furniture. Nemo's Quarters, as well as The Professor's and Conseil's and Ned's Quarters are a bit wrong. You made the "Map Room" too big. All else is pretty close though.

    • @orzelw
      @orzelw 3 года назад

      Steve is to be commended on tackling the difficult (closer to "impossible") task of fitting the interior of the DISNEY Nautilus inside the exterior and accounting for details omitted from the movie. He can be forgiven for taking some artistic license. His work on the interior is highly detailed and must have taken considerable effort.