The Ship Kirk was on as and Ensign... ?The Republic? was it one of these ships. We know that its NCC was 13.. Does this mean it wasn't a Connie? They are still using the designation of "Vulcanis" and "Vulcanians" in this episode. Does this mean we could go by Matt Jefferies naming system of NCC numbers? That all Connies are 17..'s?
What where those bar graph lines after each starship representing?
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Homer: I'm gonna miss Springfield. This town's been awfully good to us.
Bart: No, it hasn't, Dad. That's why we're leaving.
Homer: Oh, yeah. [pokes his head out the window] So long, Stinktown!
I think Timo's got some pretty clear statements to make regarding this bugger...
--Jonah
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"It's obvious I'm dealing with a moron..."
--Col. Edwards, ROBOTECH
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When you're in the Sol system, come visit the Starfleet Museum
--Jonah
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"It's obvious I'm dealing with a moron..."
--Col. Edwards, ROBOTECH
FYI
The Making of Star Trek (1968)
USS Enterprise is a Starship Class and Enterprise Class ship.
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takeoffs are optional; landings are mandatory
Unfortunately... He didn't bother to track down Matt Jeffries and talk to him about the ship he'd designed, inside and out.
Unfortunately... He spoke almost entirely to Gene himself, a man who had the unfortunate tendancy to, when posed with a question to which he dind't know the answer, pull something out of his ass on the spot. That book is the source of most of the errors in Franz Joseph's works.
--Jonah
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"It's obvious I'm dealing with a moron..."
--Col. Edwards, ROBOTECH
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Star Trek Gamma Quadrant
Average Rated 8.32 out of 10 Smileys by Fabrux (with seven eps posted)
***
"Oh, yes, screw logic, let's go for a theory with no evidence!"
-Omega 11:48am, Jan. 19th, 2001
***
I wouln't say that anyone who has ceased to post every time you rant has "realized that they couldn't win" Omega. It's more like "oh, great he comes Mr. conservative frontal lobotomy boy who only hits one note over and over and over and over..."
-Jay, July 15, 2000
It may have been Jeffries idea to have all the Constitutions be NCC-17xx, and you could argue that they were, but the Constellation would stand up and loudly shout out "OI! You're wrong!".
This isn't something like the Melbourne which can be easily explained away. The Constellation, with registy of NCC-1017, was shown extremely clearly on screen. And (anticipating the Yamoto arguement), has never been contradicted on screen.
So, what can we learn from this? That there was at least one Constitution whos registry began with something other than NCC-17xx, and that there will always be people who believe the Earth is flat, that bitter is better than larger, and that the Enterprise was a Starship/Enterprise-class starship.
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You know, when Comedy Central asked us to do a Thanksgiving episode, the first thought that went through my mind was, "Boy, I'd like to have sex with Jennifer Aniston."
-Trey Parker, co-creator of South Park
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"Second star to the right, and then straight on till morning."
NCC 1709, 75%
NCC 1831, 100%
NCC 1703, 50%
NCC 1672, 72%
NCC 1664, 76%
NCC 1697, 30%
NCC 1701, 83%
NCC 1718, 45%
NCC 1685, 21%
NCC 1700, 11%
As near as I can tell, anyway. The screencap isn't too great. I stepped through the actual frames of the DVD to come up w/ the numbers.
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"Although, from what I understand, having travelled around the Mid-west quite a bit, apparently Jesus is coming, so I guess the choice now is we should decide whether we should spit or swallow."
-Maynard James Keenan
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"Although, from what I understand, having travelled around the Mid-west quite a bit, apparently Jesus is coming, so I guess the choice now is we should decide whether we should spit or swallow."
-Maynard James Keenan
[This message has been edited by TSN (edited April 16, 2001).]
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"Second star to the right, and then straight on till morning."
In the end, the issues will never be solved. We don't have documented evidence on how the original producers understood the registry system. We don't know enough of the original classification system for starships or how many starship classes were in the whole starship family. And, finally, we don't have an understanding of the chart. Was the chart a random sorting of registries, or was there an order to the chart?
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takeoffs are optional; landings are mandatory
[This message has been edited by targetemployee (edited April 17, 2001).]
Now it also makes sense why Commodore Stone is in Red... this starbase seems to be a prominent Engineering station.
Do all those registries have to belong to connies?
I might have missed the dialogue? Are you assuming that the Intrepid was a connie from his dialogue!?! confuse here, can someone run me passed the scene dialogue again.
About the registries, the problem with the 17xx group of ships arise when we see the Constellation in season 2 saying its a 1017... so can't the constellation be in reality a 17xx ship, but for some sort of reason wanted to keep the 1017 registry? We've seen the E's do it - although maybe for ships that wanted to keep the registries before the E-A there was no letter suffix.
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Homer: I'm gonna miss Springfield. This town's been awfully good to us.
Bart: No, it hasn't, Dad. That's why we're leaving.
Homer: Oh, yeah. [pokes his head out the window] So long, Stinktown!
Boris
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"@%#@&@#The@#@truth$#$# @#@$@points@#@#to@#@$@# itself@#@$@#@$"
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"Although, from what I understand, having travelled around the Mid-west quite a bit, apparently Jesus is coming, so I guess the choice now is we should decide whether we should spit or swallow."
-Maynard James Keenan
Just for curiosty, is there evidence that these 16xx ships are Constitution class?
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Signature for sale! For a mere price of $20 per letter you get this wonderful little space to say your own things. Get it now while there's still space!
-All you base belong to infinity. -infinity11
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You know, when Comedy Central asked us to do a Thanksgiving episode, the first thought that went through my mind was, "Boy, I'd like to have sex with Jennifer Aniston."
-Trey Parker, co-creator of South Park
But everything else is wonderful. He even got the bowling alley -- and in the right place. His research methods leave me shaking my head. Some of the obscure things he got right and some of the blatant things he got wrong...
--Jonah
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"It's obvious I'm dealing with a moron..."
--Col. Edwards, ROBOTECH
Another consideration-
There is no evidence for all of these ships to be Connies. There is evidence to support the contention that the list may be listing ships of different starship classes. In the year of this episode, there were at least two starship classes in service-the Enterprise and the unnamed starship of "The Menagerie".
Another consideration-
There is no canonical evidence to support the registry theories that I am reading at this thread. Further, the only time the NCC-1700 is seen is in the episode "Datalore". This ship is seen from the top with the registry and no corresponding name. (She is a refit.) And since the diagram in "Space Seed" is not readable and hasn't been seen again, the NCC-1700 is a Constitution Class starship with no name. So, our list reads as follows-
NCC- USS Constitution
NCC- USS Defiant
NCC- USS Excalibur
NCC- USS Exeter
NCC- USS Farrugut (rf. below)
NCC- USS Hood
NCC- USS Intrepid (rf. below)
NCC- USS Lexingtion
NCC- USS Potemkin
NCC-1017 USS Constellation
NCC-1700
NCC-1701 USS Enterprise
NCC-1701-A USS Enterprise
This partial list supports the contention by some that the USS Constitution precedes the USS Constellation in the order of ships.
Another consideration-
The USS Intrepid's crew is numbered at 430. This is from "The Immunity Syndrome". How many classes of ships would have the same number of crew? I don't think very many, and this is why I list the USS Intrepid as Connie. Though there is a possibility that the ship was Connie, she may have been something else. The same could be said for the USS Farrugut which had about 400 crew members in the 2250's.
All of the above has been based on what is hearable and seeable in the episodes and films without the assistance of tech manuals, encyclopedias, and other wriiten material.
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takeoffs are optional; landings are mandatory
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"Although, from what I understand, having travelled around the Mid-west quite a bit, apparently Jesus is coming, so I guess the choice now is we should decide whether we should spit or swallow."
-Maynard James Keenan
Was the Constellation definately a connie? '17' type... maybe it was a '10' type connie? i.e. 1701 and 1017
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Homer: I'm gonna miss Springfield. This town's been awfully good to us.
Bart: No, it hasn't, Dad. That's why we're leaving.
Homer: Oh, yeah. [pokes his head out the window] So long, Stinktown!
Timo Saloniemi
Is it the Franz Joseph blueprints that put Engineering behind the Impulse engines, while everyone else puts them in the secondary hull? Or the other way around?
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You know, when Comedy Central asked us to do a Thanksgiving episode, the first thought that went through my mind was, "Boy, I'd like to have sex with Jennifer Aniston."
-Trey Parker, co-creator of South Park
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"Well if it's gonna be that kind of a party, I'm putting my dick in the mashed potatoes!"
-Nimrod 16/4/2001
--Jonah
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"It's obvious I'm dealing with a moron..."
--Col. Edwards, ROBOTECH
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"Although, from what I understand, having travelled around the Mid-west quite a bit, apparently Jesus is coming, so I guess the choice now is we should decide whether we should spit or swallow."
-Maynard James Keenan
Maybe then, we can come back to the 'blocks' of registries. Maybe the 1700's are for the connies, its just that a few others WERE assigned 1700 registries, but decided to take older, unused registries like 1017 and 16xx or what ever.
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Homer: I'm gonna miss Springfield. This town's been awfully good to us.
Bart: No, it hasn't, Dad. That's why we're leaving.
Homer: Oh, yeah. [pokes his head out the window] So long, Stinktown!
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"Although, from what I understand, having travelled around the Mid-west quite a bit, apparently Jesus is coming, so I guess the choice now is we should decide whether we should spit or swallow."
-Maynard James Keenan
I have always read both the Whitfield and Joseph books with wonder since childhood. It is always disheartening to me to see them taken to task so.
Nothing about TOS was ever 'perfect' or 'accurate'. I don't think Gene Roddenberry was GOD. But Star Trek WAS his brainchild. When writing a book of a type ( The Making of _insert favorite tv show_) not yet published, why not go to the source? That source-like it or not-was Gene Roddenberry.
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Purrr...
In the 2240's Starfleet starts building a new type of starship, this class is the first of three batches, the first stating in 2243 (2 years before E-nil is commissioned) 2250's for the Bonhonmme class and 2260's for the Achenar class. The basis behind this is to when the last of the first batch is commissioned by this time technology will have been advanced far to put this first batch behind, so a second is built while these ships are in service so when the second batch is done, the first batch is brought in and the second batch fill in. The third finishes while the second batch is sent in for a refit while the first and third batch fill in then the first goes in and the seond fills in.
The old USS Eagle NCC-956 and USS Constellation NCC-1017 are old ships with a service life almost coming to an end along with their classmates. Starfleet use these ships to refit them up to the Constitution specs (hey Star Trek 1 did it) This is only a test to see how much better they are compared to a scratch built Connie. Tests show that the ships are 80% as strong but Starfleet decides against it. In 2250's the issue is brought up again and the USS Republic NCC-1371 is brough in for refit, not much of an improvement. However in the 2260's Starfleet brings in the previous class prior to the Connie class for a refit to Achernar class. Since the similarity between the two classes the 1600's type was easily refitted to the Connie config. About 10 to 12 ships of the 1600's type was refitted.
It needs to be flshed out for inconsistencies but it works. The original Connies of the 2240's would be structurally different than the Connies of the 2250's so when Kirk mentioned only 12 ships of this type he meant the 2240's not the entire complement of ships. That's my two cents...
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Signature for sale! For a mere price of $20 per letter you get this wonderful little space to say your own things. Get it now while there's still space!
-All you base belong to infinity. -infinity11
The Eagle, and the Constellation could have been DRASTICALLY different, with even a 'ball' for the 'saucer' like the Daedelus Class ships!
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Homer: I'm gonna miss Springfield. This town's been awfully good to us.
Bart: No, it hasn't, Dad. That's why we're leaving.
Homer: Oh, yeah. [pokes his head out the window] So long, Stinktown!
I've doodled my share of pre-TOS ships, and a "Horizon class" made out of a Constitution secondary hull, a flattened-sphere primary hull mounted on a very short neck, and two nacelles slightly smaller than the eventual Constitution ones, on extremely short pylons close to the hull, would seem to do the trick. A relatively sleek starship would result, nicely between Daedalus and Constitution in design philosophy.
Starfleet would then try out several different ways to fit a saucer hull into that design. Not all of them would have to look like Constitutions - perhaps the Eagle and the Republic never much looked like the Enterprise, and only the Constellation (the only low-rego ship we actually saw on screen) actually resembled the end product?
Timo Saloniemi
Like the whole secondary hull full of jelly!?!
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Homer: I'm gonna miss Springfield. This town's been awfully good to us.
Bart: No, it hasn't, Dad. That's why we're leaving.
Homer: Oh, yeah. [pokes his head out the window] So long, Stinktown!
"NCC" would be the Starfleet prefix for their Cruisers. The "17" indicated the 17th Federation cruiser design. "01" indicated the first production hull built after the prototype.
We have a non-canon 16th cruiser design in the Baton Rouge, and they were more-or-less externally comparable to the TOS Enterprise as the TOS Enterprise was to the movie Enterprise -- a little smaller, a little less refined, a little lower tech. Most of the Constitution class' breakthroughs were evidently internal, and probably due in no small part to the breakthrough of Duotronics.
The non-canon Horizon class was essentially a larger version of the Daedalus, with registries in the low 1000s. This is what the Constellation originally was, and I even wrote a story about Captain Decker saving his ship and crew in the face of nasty odds, getting promoted to Commodore, and using his clout to have the Constellation refit using the new Constitution prototype as a template.
And then there was also the non-canon Archon class, which was a refit of the Horizon, replacing the spherical primary hull with the first large-scale saucer hull. They had registries in the 1300s, and the Republic belonged to this class.
Bear in mind this is all fandom stuff, and much of it is not in keeping with the current official party line, but I like it so much better than said party line...
--Jonah
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"It's obvious I'm dealing with a moron..."
--Col. Edwards, ROBOTECH
I said -- "Unfortunately... He spoke almost entirely to Gene himself, a man who had the unfortunate tendancy to, when posed with a question to which he dind't know the answer, pull something out of his ass on the spot."
To which our Caitian pal said -- "I have always read both the Whitfield and Joseph books with wonder since childhood. It is always disheartening to me to see them taken to task so.
"Nothing about TOS was ever 'perfect' or 'accurate'. I don't think Gene Roddenberry was GOD. But Star Trek WAS his brainchild. When writing a book of a type ( The Making of _insert favorite tv show_) not yet published, why not go to the source? That source-like it or not-was Gene Roddenberry."
I, too, have been the proud owner of the Star Fleet Technical Manual, the Enterprise deckplans, and The Making of Star Trek for long years now, but my love for Star Trek is more than devotion to any single individual associated with it -- even Gene himself. He had a wonderful idea for the show, and wrote some good episodes himself, but when it came to the ship, Gene's only real input was that it wouldn't use conventional sci-fi or real-world propulsion effects, that the main bridge was to be on the top of the primary hull, and that it would have a large engine room. Everything else was created by Matt Jeffries, and in my decidedly-unhumble opinion, Mr. Whitfield made a serious error in not talking to Mr. Jeffries for the bit on what's where on the big 'E'.
--Jonah
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"It's obvious I'm dealing with a moron..."
--Col. Edwards, ROBOTECH
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"Replicate some marmalade, Commander - helm control is toast!"