In the film's screenplay the
starship carries no name, only the designation "United Planets Cruiser C-57D". The saucer has a
lenticular profile. Above there is a dome, approximately a third of the diameter of the lens. Below there is a shallow cylinder of about the same diameter, and a smaller dome that ostensibly houses the starship's
faster-than-light drive engine and central
gyroscopic landing pedestal. The precise contours and proportions differ slightly between the saucer's shooting miniatures, full-size sets, and
matte paintings used in the film. Upon the depicted landing, the saucer's
gangway and two conveyor-loading ramps swing down at an angle from the underside hull, near the edge of the lower lens shape. The film's blueprints for the command deck depict a central circular "navigation center" with a transparent globe centered on a small model of the starship. Around this central space are a number of wedge-shaped rooms, including: • A room with a curved table, chairs, and a space for books (presumably a galley and recreation room). • A room with the "communications center", a chart table and the "main viewscope". • A room with 16 bunk beds, with a pit and crane between it and the central area. • A room with nine "decelerator platforms". The film shows the crew standing on these low, cylindrical platforms, enveloped within an opaque blue glow while the saucer decelerates from hyperdrive, but does not show whether these low platforms must also be used during the transition to faster-than-light speed. On the starship's
mezzanine level is an instrument station and other rooms that are not seen. The studio created a stage set of the interior command and mezzanine decks and a 60-ft (18 m) semicircular mock-up of the landed saucer's lower half (with the deployed central landing pedestal, gangway, and conveyor ramps). The sets suggest that the starship is somewhere between in diameter. Three saucer miniatures were used, of , , and or in diameter, and costing an estimated total of $20,000. The largest miniature, constructed of wood, steel, and
fiberglass, which contained the internal motors for the gangway, conveyor ramps, central landing pedestal, and glowing neon-red light engine, weighed . In 1970, MGM sold these miniatures as part of an MGM studio auction, but no record was kept of who bought the largest of the three. A North Carolina man originally bought it for $800, but had not realized its market value until 2008, when he offered the model for auction and it sold for $78,000. ==Appearances in
The Twilight Zone==