This is topic D-7 battlecruiser $Prophecy$ in forum Starships & Technology at Flare Sci-Fi Forums.


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Posted by Galen (Member # 72) on :
 
In "Prophecy" Tuvok calls the K't'inga a D-7 Class cruiser. Paris comments that they were retired decades ago.

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"I tried once to be a history teacher, but I saw no future in it."



 


Posted by Ritten (Member # 417) on :
 
Because it was, even with my tiny TV I noticed the disc/ring shaped housing on the bridge, without the odd superstructure on it as well. The best scene to notice it on was when the D7 flew up behind Voyager, a good clean shot, it has a smooth bridge sphere with the oddball ring housing.

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"One's ethics are determined by what we do when no one is looking" Nugget
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Posted by nx001a (Member # 291) on :
 
Since I won't see this episode for at least a year what is the name and class of the klingon ship. I would appreciate it very much so i can update my ship records.

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Posted by Dukhat (Member # 341) on :
 
The ship was not given a name. Tuvok specified that it was a D-7, which I believe is the first time the term has been spoken in an episode. I couldn't really tell if it was the model Greg Jein made for "Trials and Tribble-ations," but if it was, then it would definitely be a D-7.

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Star Trek: Legacy



 


Posted by Masao (Member # 232) on :
 
So this was a smooth, TOS-style Klingon, not the model kit parts-encrusted ship built for ST:TMP? I thought D7 and K'tinga were different ships: D7 in TOS, K'Tinga in ST:TMP?

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Posted by Ritten (Member # 417) on :
 
Looked smooth to me....

------------------
"One's ethics are determined by what we do when no one is looking" Nugget
Star Trek: Gamma Quadrant
Star Trek: Legacy
Read them, rate them, got money, film them

"...and I remain on the far side of crazy, I remain the mortal enemy of man, no hundred dollar cure will save me..." WoV



 


Posted by PsyLiam (Member # 73) on :
 
Wasn't "D7" said on-screen in Trials and Tribble-ations?

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Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
What would that then make those Klingon ships in DS9... K'tingas?

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"This is cooling, faster than I can..." Tori Amos "Cooling"
 


Posted by Dukhat (Member # 341) on :
 
The ship Jein built was a hybrid, if you will. It was more detailed than the TOS model, but less detailed than the Motion Picture model. If Koloth's ship was referred to as a D-7, then the model they used in this episode could have been the same one. That would also mean that the Jein model is NOT a K'Tinga, and the TMP model IS.

There were no real closeups of the model in the episode, so as of now I can't say which model was used.

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Star Trek: Legacy



 


Posted by Timo (Member # 245) on :
 
One could say that there are at least four distinct versions of the battlecruiser:

1) The smooth TOS ship first seen in "Elaan of Troyius" (or "The Enterprise Incident", depending on airing order), never really named one way or the other (but Shatner and Nimoy apparently joked something about it being a D-7).

2) The more detailed Jein take on a TOS-era, explicitly called a D-7.

3) The smooth cartoon version with a protruding deflector and other differences, apparently called the D-5 (since Kor in DS9 said his old ship Klothos was of D-5 class, and he flew a ship named Klothos in TAS).

4) The upgraded version seen in TMP and other TOS movies, as well as in TNG and non-time-travel-DS9, apparently named K't'inga (but which episode actually uses this name?).

Of course, one could say that 1) and 2) are the same thing, and blame the low resolution of 2260s visual recorders for the smoothness of 1).

One could also assign D-designations to those ships that do not have them yet. If the TAS ship was a D-5 and the "Tribble-ations" ship was a D-7, then perhaps the TOS smooth ship was a D-6? And perhaps the K't'inga is a D-8, D-9, D-10, D-11..? It should probably precede D-12, though, since that designation was given in "Generations" to a largish BoP which would seem to have been introduced only after we saw K't'ingas for the first time.

Timo Saloniemi
 


Posted by Austin Powers (Member # 250) on :
 
Excuse me, but we are talking about MODELS in a Voyager ep.!? I thought the SFX in VOY are all done in CGI nowadays?

And as for Trials - didn't they use CGI there as well? Or did they really build models of the Enterprise, the Klingon ship and K7 space station?

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RIMMER [as Ace]: "Stoke me a clipper, I'll be back for Christmas."

 


Posted by Timo (Member # 245) on :
 
"T&T" was done completely with models, AFAIK. At least models were built for all the three vehicles seen.

It's difficult to say what the Voyager standard practices are, but I believe they would use models whenever those happened to already exist (as they do for the Klingon ship and for the Voyager herself). Only all-new designs would be done in pure CGI. It's probably still cheaper and/or faster to film things that way, unless the ships are supposed to perform complex space ballet or explode into detailed pieces.

Timo Saloniemi
 


Posted by Daniel (Member # 453) on :
 
Umm, I saw Trials & Tribble-ations and to me, the K-7 station and the Enterprise looked, well, computer generated. Are you positive that they built models for that episode? Why would they go through the expense of building a new original E model, or a K-7 model if they could do it on the computer? I think it would be less costly that way. And didn't they use some completely CGI sequences of the E-B in Generations? That sort of takes apart the "if they have models they'll use 'em," theory. I also believe they do CGI work of Voyager herself for certain scenes in episodes.
 
Posted by Jim Phelps (Member # 102) on :
 
Pictures exist at The IDIC Page (don't know the URL offhand but you can search for it) of all the models from "Trials", proving that the physical models were actually built.

You have to remember that DS9 didn't use a lot of CGI before the war-arc in season 6. The only CGI models were a runabout, a Jem'Hadar attack ship, and the Defiant, and even these were used rarely compared to their physical equivalents. The fleet shot at the end of "A Call to Arms" was still pretty much all-model. The reason? I don't know, except that DS9 was originally envisioned as a model-show, which probably remained a tradition until the more complicated fleet shots in seasons 6 and 7 demanded a change in strategy, from all-model to all-CGI. It is also possible that the producers still didn't feel that CGI was up to it at that time.

Boris
 


Posted by Dukhat (Member # 341) on :
 
When I originally saw "T&T" I thought the ships and the station were computer-generated as well, but Timo is right: they were physical models. The fact that everyone thought the models were CGI is attributed to Greg Jein's modeling skills. Jein also seems to build his models because he wants to, not because they are actually needed or that he's getting a whole lot of money to do it. Sure, they could have made CGI models, but Jein probably said something to the effect of, "I really want to build these models, and although the money and man-hours for another person to do it would be higher than making them CGI, I'll do it for peanuts."

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Posted by Lee (Member # 393) on :
 
I don't know why, but I didn't like the models in "T&T." They just looked. . . I dunno, fake. Which is, after all, what they are - maybe they looked too much like models, I guess! Could it be I was so used to seeing the Enterprise in fuzzy 60's TV quality?

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Posted by Cartman (Member # 256) on :
 
A few gripes that are slightly off-topic:

If the ship and its cloak were as "antiquated" as was claimed, how come Voyager's standard sensors didn't detect it immediately?

[Even more off-topic] So much for a tactical advantage in a cloak, because Voyagers' shields were up (?!).
And why, oh why did a couple of ancient torpedoes reduce those shields of a supposedly state-of-the-art ship by at least 50 percent? [/Even more off-topic]

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Posted by ASDB_J (Member # 312) on :
 
They also showed the D-7 firing torpedoes from the deflector.

And the ship had a cloaking device - the first D-7 or K'tinga we saw with a cloaking device (in Star Trek time) was Kang's ship in "Flashback" on Voyager.

Chronologically in RL, the first time we saw those ships with cloak was in DS9's "Way of the Warrior," IIRC.

I suppose high-ranking ships could have had cloaks, explaining Kang's ship. Even so, the guys in "Prophecy" left before the Khitomer Accords (presumably before ST6). That means they had a cloak pretty early on, like Kang did.

I have not checked, but the ship on Voyager looked to be the CGI K'tinga from DS9 episodes, not the smooth model Jein built for "T&T." I'd have to watch again, though.

At any rate, the episode's D-7 may have undergone many refits along her century of a journey - that may explain weapons & surface-detailing inconsistencies.


Oh, and what was with the streaking particles at impulse?? ...and the overloading Voyager deflector glow??? *L*

~ Jason :-)


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[This message has been edited by Capt_Spencer (edited February 09, 2001).]
 


Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
I for one - LOVED the T&T models... so crisp and clean - so REAL. The original Enterprise was very hard for me to picture "real" T&T did it for me. Models still look better and more real than CGI - and remember we don't get the nice beauty shots of starships anymore with CGI - because they render moving CGI at a lower resolution because each frame will end up part of a much larger movie...

Its easy to notice because if you see the CGI screen caps around the web - the CGI ones always have seem to have comeout less clear than the models... see the "A Time to Stand" screen caps.

Tsk.

Andrew

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"This is cooling, faster than I can..." Tori Amos "Cooling"
 


Posted by Timo (Member # 245) on :
 
Actually, the first D-7 (or TOS battlecruiser, whatever its actual designation) to be seen cloaking was the Romulan vessel in "The Enterprise Incident". Kang's "Flashback" cruiser was the first cloaking battlecruiser to be seen in *Klingon* hands (although I don't think we ever actually saw it cloak or decloak), but Klingons could have acquired cloaks far earlier, perhaps even the same time the Romulans got those battlecruisers.

In any case, there is a clear difference between the TOS ship and the K't'inga in that the former doesn't have impulse engines at all. Did Jein's "T&T" ship have impulse engines? Should we assume that the TOS ships had those, too?

There are plenty of possibilities to wiggle out of this mess.

1) Tuvok may have at first misidentified the ship - it looks like a TOS ship from dead ahead, after all. Perhaps only a closer look at the stern parts revealed it to be of some other class, but this information was not so critical that Tuvok would have divulged it when the camera was looking at him.

2) Tuvok may have correctly identified the ship, and D-7 is the correct designation for the "T&T" ship but incorrect for the TOS ships (which could be D-6 or something). The "T&T" ship may come in torpedo-firing versions even if the one actually seen in that DS9 episode had a deflector dish.

3) Tuvok may have correctly identified the ship as belonging to a big family of ships, which is called D-7 and includes the TOS ships, the "T&T" ship and the K't'inga, but excludes the TAS ships (which would be D-5).

4) Tuvok may have correctly identified the ship as belonging to a big family that is called D-7 and includes ALL the battlecruiser variants seen. The TAS ship is another D-7 variant, while the D-5 class IKC Klothos spoken of by Kor was an even older ship which Kor later used as the namesake of his TAS D-7.

Timo Saloniemi

 


Posted by MinutiaeMan (Member # 444) on :
 
A while ago I put together a list of the Klingon ships, assuming that the "D" names were just a designation, and not the actual class name.

I've always figured that the D-## numbers were production numbers, not the actual class name.

D-7 - Kolode or Akif or whatever (no 'real' name was ever canonically established).

D-8 - the K't'inga Class. This has to be a different class because of its different length and different configuration of the forward pod and the engineering section.

D-9 - the first B'rel Class BOP.

D-10 - The K'vort Class BOP.

D-11 - A new, "refit" version of the B'rel using updated technology but the same hull design. This helps explain why the same basic BOP has been in use for 90+ years.

D-12 - another B'rel update, the one seen in Generations.

D-13 - the Vor'cha Class cruiser.

D-14 - the latest model of the B'rel. This is the one that saw the most action in the Dominion War.

D-15 - the Negh'Var assault cruisers.

~~~~~

I haven't seen "Prophecy" yet, but it seems to me that they'd use the D-7 cruiser for this. Aren't these Klingons supposed to be an outcast sect or something? One would expect that they wouldn't get their hands on a state-of-the-art model, but rather an older ship that was about to be decommissioned.

As for the cloaking device, we know that the Klingons had them as early as 2285 (Star Trek III) and probably a lot earlier, like 2270. Most people seem to agree that the Klingons exchanged D-7 cruisers to the Romulans in exchange for cloaking devices. (IMO, they did a straight trade of ships, which is how the Klingons started using ships that were called "Bird-of-Prey.")

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Posted by Psi'a Meese on :
 
Purrr....

Actually, the first Klingon cruiser with an active cloaking device was the sleeper ship, T'Ong. As seen in TNG, Year 2, "The Emissary". The ship seen was the same one from TMP. They actully used that shot from the opening scene of TMP having matted out the other two cruiser's. The T'Ong was launched in 2290, same year as Kang's confrontation with Sulu (VOY,"Flashback").

Also, I happen to own an original copy of TMP Blueprints, signed by Gene Roddenberry and Andrew Probert. They were released on December 7, 1979 and published by Pocket Books, copyright 1980. The general plans for the Klingon Warship interpret as follows:

Model: Drell-4
Type: Battle cruiser
Class: Star Cruiser

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I expect this will be glossed over, as I posted the information on boards in years past and it was virtually ignored. Purrr....
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I would love to comment on what is seen in VOY, "Prophecy". But I won't catch it until Sunday evening.
 


Posted by Vacuum robot lady from Spaceballs (Member # 239) on :
 
What's with the purring?

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Posted by Dukhat (Member # 341) on :
 
P'sia: No one at this board glosses over anyone else's posts...unless the person doesn't know what they're talking about. Then we just make fun of them.

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Posted by Lee (Member # 393) on :
 
Yeah, That's the really fun part about coming here. 8)

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Posted by Psi'a Meese on :
 
Purrr...

Well then. Go ahead and have at it. I know we can get serious. But its all in fun really anyway.

I saw VOY, "Prophecy", finally. Not sure what I make of the Klingon ship. The level of window detail and the blue-green inside the warp nacelles, implies it is the model of Krono's One from ST:VI. Krono's One having been the orginal TMP ship model that got detailed further.
But when they showed it from the top, bearing down on Voyager, the details around the bridge command pod seemed lacking (I think someone else pointed that out). It suggests CGI may actually be the case there. Perhaps close detail was not really necessary.

What I think disappointed me most was the Klingon torpedos. I wish they appeared more like those fired by Kang's cruiser's in VOY, "Flashback". The same ones seen in TMP.

The more I re-read this thread, the more I can't seem to recall at what point "K'T'Inga" became popular-in general. We had already established D-7 for the TOS battlecruiser via "Trials & Tribble-ations". The class designation actually made it into the Encyclopedia as a _conjectural_ entry. SO I guess it was never actually spoken in the movies or TNG.

[This message has been edited by Psi'a Meese (edited February 12, 2001).]
 


Posted by Identity Crisis (Member # 67) on :
 
Hmm, I won't see the episode for months. Grr.

I've been thinking about this subject quite a bit lately and I tend to agree with Timo.

TOS ship - (D6?)
TAS ship - D5
T+T ship - D7
TMP ship - K't'inga (D8?)

I think the name K't'inga originated in the TMP novelisation.

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-->Identity Crisis<--



 


Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
I have a chart of alien starships... from Ex Astris Scientia - I think it was done by Bernd... anyway he puts the K't'inga at 214m and the D7? from TOS at 228m... does anyone know why there's such a large difference in length!?!

Andrew

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"This is cooling, faster than I can..." Tori Amos "Cooling"
 


Posted by Timo (Member # 245) on :
 
Apparently, the differences in forward pod and warp nacelle shapes are enough to justify that difference. The TMP modelmakers didn't produce an exact copy of the TOS cruiser, any more than the movie Enterprise was a copy of the TOS ship. Several important hull parts of the vessels were changed in dimensions and shape, in addition to the obvious changes of nacelle or pylon type.

I'd be happiest if every Klingon design had a double identifier - a D number AND a class name. So far, there are no clear cases of such a thing being true, though. There is no canon D designation for the K't'inga or the B'Rel or the K'Vort, and no name for D-7 or D-5 or D-12 - and the rest of the names and designations are noncanon.

My interpretation:

D-4/???: a pre-TOS ship, as John M. Ford writes
D-5/???: the TAS ship, also used by Ford
D-6/Klolode: the TOS ship
D-7/Akif: the "Trials and Tribble-ations" ship
D-8/K't'inga: the TMP ship
D-9/????: the small ST3/DS9 BoP,
D-12/B'Rel: the large BoP from "Generations", currently retired or for sale to Ferengi
D-13/K'Vort: the large BoP from TNG/DS9
D-14/Vor'Cha: the attack cruiser
D-15/Negh'Var: the command ship

Timo Saloniemi

 


Posted by MinutiaeMan (Member # 444) on :
 
One thing I've never understood is why some people try to distinguish the Klingon cruisers from TOS and TAS. I recently looked at a TAS site that had pictures of the battlecruiser as seen in the animated episodes, and the design was identical to the cruiser as seen in "The Enterprise Incident" et al.

The only differences were:
(1) The torpedo tube projects OUT of the forward hull instead of being recessed.
(2) There are a pair of horizontal fins on the ship, near the back of the neck, I believe.

Other than that, the designs are identical. Apparently, the animators used a TOS model kit as the reference, and the instructions were a bit off the mark with regard to those two features. But otherwise, they're identical.

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You know, you really should keep a personal log. Why bore others needlessly?
The Gigantic Collection of Star Trek Minutiae

 


Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
What about the blinking light from the organia episode...

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"This is cooling, faster than I can..." Tori Amos "Cooling"
 


Posted by Timo (Member # 245) on :
 
Well, all of the battlecruisers are basically identical, unless one observes the tiny details or surface patterning. Yet it would not be good form to call the K't'inga the same as the TOS ship (these can't even be refits of each other unless the whole forward pod was changed, since the shapes differ).

IMHO the minor differences between TOS and TAS vessels would justify differing designations - and internal differences could be more extreme, considering that only the TAS ships were seen with stasis weapons, and the interiors of the TOS ships in Romulan service differed quite a bit from the TAS Klingon interiors (too bad we never saw Klingon interiors in TOS).

The fact that we saw no definite ship in "Errand of Mercy" could mean that Klingons had partially working cloaks back then. Or then we could simply rejoice on the fact that for once we saw space combat at realistic distances, so that the opponents saw each other only as specks of light.

Timo Saloniemi

 


Posted by Galen (Member # 72) on :
 
Man, post a comment, don't visit for a few days, come back to find 30 replies. Now I have quite the information to disseminate and add to my knowledge base. The reason I posted it in the first place was that I had always differentiated the TOS ship from the movie version by calling the former a D7 and the latter a K'T'Inga. After I heard Tuvok's comment I just had to post it here and see the opinions come in. Now I need to read through them all, but thanks to everyone for posting.

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-Homer Simpson

 


Posted by Ritten (Member # 417) on :
 
Aaahhhhh, you are very welcome, yes, very welcome indeed.....

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"One's ethics are determined by what we do when no one is looking" Nugget
Star Trek: Gamma Quadrant
Star Trek: Legacy
Read them, rate them, got money, film them

"...and I remain on the far side of crazy, I remain the mortal enemy of man, no hundred dollar cure will save me..." WoV


 


Posted by [email protected] on :
 
If the Klingon ship seen on Voyager's "Prophecy" had 2 disrupters on each nacelle it's a D7 class battlecruiser!

JDW
 


Posted by Timo (Member # 245) on :
 
Speaking of which, when was the last time we saw a Klingon battlecruiser fire disruptors?

It would seem the effects people have never watched TOS, and are thinking that the only weapons ports on the ships are the opening at the bow and (on select ships) a corresponding hole at the stern. This is where torps and red (phaser?) beams always erupt from.

Timo Saloniemi
 


Posted by Galen (Member # 72) on :
 
Just watched "Rules of Engagement" over the weekend. In the battle scene with the Klingons there was the Jein-built model from "Trials and Tribulations" which O'Brien referred to as an old battlecruiser. I had not paid attention the first time I watched that episode. I didn't know that they had used it outside of T&T.
And the D-7 in "Prophecy" definately wasn't the model built for T&T.

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-Homer Simpson

[This message has been edited by Galen (edited February 20, 2001).]
 


Posted by Timo (Member # 245) on :
 
Hey, that's really interesting! I have a (low-res) tape of "Rules", and I'd like to see if I can spot the telltale signs, too. What would those signs be?

The "Rules" ship used the red beam weapon firing from the bow opening, again suggesting that if a connection with TOS was attempted, it was a rather half-hearted attempt. Or then a deliberate effort to show that these old ships are useful only through major refitting that involves swapping the primary weapons.

Timo Saloniemi
 




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