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Posted by The Mighty Monkey of Mim (Member # 646) on :
 
Was it the Valkyrie in "Redemption" (TNG) or was it the Hathaway? I know someone says it was the H. but their registries are similar. (NCC-2593 and NCC-2590)

Shouldn't we know if it's the Valkyrie, because if it is it will be upside down?
 


Posted by MinutiaeMan (Member # 444) on :
 
The Valkyrie was not upside-down, it was just displayed that way at some Trek show.
 
Posted by The Mighty Monkey of Mim (Member # 646) on :
 
Oh. Sorry. (I thought the model was labeled on the wrong side accidentally.)

But anyways, was the "Redemption" ship the Valkyrie or the Hathaway?
 


Posted by TSN (Member # 31) on :
 
Actually, I think it was labelled the wrong way. Or was that a different ship?
 
Posted by Aethelwer (Member # 36) on :
 
IIRC, it had the Hathaway's registry.
 
Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
the Valkyrie model is the same one as the Hathaway (& presumably the stargazer) You can still the faint lettering under the name Valkyrie.
Since there is no way you can make out what the registry was onscreen, we must assume that it was NCC-2590, If this was indeed the Valkyrie & not the Hathaway.
 
Posted by MinutiaeMan (Member # 444) on :
 
Actually, I looked over that shot of the fleet departing a while ago, and I saw a registry of NCC-259x. (Couldn't make out the last number.) So that would support the Valkyrie theory.

I'm not sure, but I believe that "Redemption" was the last time we saw a Constellation-class ship on screen. So it would stand to reason that they kept the labeling from the last time the model was used, when it went on tour.
 


Posted by TSN (Member # 31) on :
 
"Actually, I looked over that shot of the fleet departing a while ago, and I saw a registry of NCC-259x. (Couldn't make out the last number.) So that would support the Valkyrie theory."

Erm... Except that it also supports the Hathaway theory, so it doesn't really help...
 


Posted by The Red Admiral (Member # 602) on :
 
I think I can shed some light on this. MMOM suggested I do a screencap of this in the Qualor II thread.

It looks awful, but this isn't an aesthetic image, but an extreme closeup to search for detail, but this is the best, crispest quality I could get.

Looking at this enhanced, and inverted image of the Valkyrie in 'Redemption', it does look indeed like the last digit of the Regsitry apprears to be a three. Have a close look, then move back from the screen then you'll see what I mean.

I myself have the Valkyrie listed on my own site as NCC 2590. But it appears the registry here is NCC 2593, which makes this in fact a reuse of the Hathaway model.


 


Posted by The Mighty Monkey of Mim (Member # 646) on :
 
Okay then. We still don't have an appearance for the Valkyrie. So, now, where could it possibly have appeared?
 
Posted by MinutiaeMan (Member # 444) on :
 
Nuts! That seriously screws things up, then -- why would they reactivate the Hathaway? Even considering Wolf 359, I don't think Starfleet was that desperate for ships.
 
Posted by TSN (Member # 31) on :
 
Damn.
 
Posted by Mark Nguyen (Member # 469) on :
 
Well, you gotta remember the context of the episode - Picard wanted to assemble a fleet in a matter of days, or even hours. So it'd make sense that they'd get any warp-capable starship they had available, as long as it could be equipped for the tachyon detection grid.

The Hathaway could have been sitting in a yard somewhere closeby when the mission came up; they could have quickly slapped a replacement dilithium crystal assembly in there, pumped a lil' antimatter into the tanks, and had the jalopy ready to go. LaForge had already done a lot of hasty retrofitting work two years previous which could have been used.

Also, the Hathaway wouldn't have been the only ship that wasn't ship-shape; Hobson had the crew of the Sutherland scramling to get the ship marginally operational.

Mark
 


Posted by The Mighty Monkey of Mim (Member # 646) on :
 
Yes, but that's not what's so aggravating. What is is that we now don't have an ep for the Valkyrie!!!!
 
Posted by TSN (Member # 31) on :
 
Monkey-boy: Well, I include it on my list of ships, anyway, just because. I noticed you have the Trinculo on yours. That was never on screen, either.

Y'know, it might make sense that the Hathaway was quickly pulled out of the scrap heap and thrown back into service. That would explain why it didn't actually make it into the detection grid. After all, it wasn't on the computer display, as shown in the Encyclopedia...
 


Posted by targetemployee (Member # 217) on :
 
The detection screen is inaccurate. According to two of the combatants, the Federation and the Romulans, the fleet had twenty-two ships. The screen has 17 ships. There are five ships missing from the screen. The reason could be is that the screen has limited space and Mr. Okuda could only fit in 17 ships, not the 22 that are mentioned.
 
Posted by The Red Admiral (Member # 602) on :
 
If they pulled the tired old Hathaway out of mothballs, boy they must have been desperate for ships - ANY ships. I mean, I agree with Mark's logic there, but hey, they might has well have just used shuttles to supplement the taskforce instead.

The Hathaway's a dinosaur, and probably couldn't defend itself against a Lysian century pod. That was a dangerous mission, with possible combat potential against Romulan warbirds. If I were assigned to the Hathaway in that mission I would've used the first available lifeboat and got the hell outa there. A quick jury-rig job on that ship just wouldn't get it into shape for that type of mission.

But then again, they used a damn Antares Class frieghter as part of the taskforce remember (the Hermes), so OTOH, they must have been so desperate as to use any Federation ship in range.
 


Posted by The Mighty Monkey of Mim (Member # 646) on :
 
TSN: I am definitely still including the Valkyrie in my list, I just find it really damn annoying not to know where it appeared, especially since we've figured that out for all the other studio model ships. (The Oberth-class U.S.S. Valiant NCC-20000 from Generations, the Nebula-class U.S.S. Leeds NCC-70352 from the DS9 opening, and the Galaxy-class U.S.S. Trinculo NCC-71867, which is another possible exception, though it probably appeared in either "Sacrifice of Angels" or "Tears of the Prophets") I really wish we could find where the Valkyrie belongs.

Were there ever ANY Constellations that appeared at DS9 or elsewhere? Were there any other apps on TNG besides the Stargazer, the Hathaway, the Magellan, or the Victory???

It must belong SOMEWHERE!


Speaking of old or inferior ships called into battle, we see this also at the Battle of Wolf 359. There we saw several old Excelsior- and Constitution-class prototypes, and at least one standard Refit Connie.

Plus that damned Oberth.
 


Posted by Reverend (Member # 335) on :
 
Was the Valkyrie on that display?
 
Posted by The Mighty Monkey of Mim (Member # 646) on :
 
No.

In fact we now know that the Valkyrie wasn't in Redemption at all. (Go figure)

Besides, even if it HAD been in the display, we'd still have to figure out where the model appeared.
 


Posted by Sol System (Member # 30) on :
 
I don't think the Hathaway would have been out of place at all. All Picard was looking for were enough ships to form a decent detection grid. That alone would more than likely be enough to dissuade the Romulans. Actually engaging a Starfleet vessel would plunge them into a war, or at the very least the mother of all sticky situations.
 
Posted by TSN (Member # 31) on :
 
The Hathaway may not have had anyone on it. It could have been remotely controlled. Or someone could have put it in place, activated the tachyon beam, and beamed out.

Monkey: Why "must" it be somewhere? The Trinculo wasn't on screen, either. I highly doubt it was in the DS9 war eps, since those Galaxies, AFAIK, were CGI.

Red Admiral: It's never been established (or even suggested, really, except by the names) that the Starfleet Antares class is the same as, or even related to, the generic freighter Antares class.
 


Posted by The Mighty Monkey of Mim (Member # 646) on :
 
TSN:
A.) It must have been used somewhere or else why would they have renamed/numbered the model. The Trinculo was probably in a Dominion War ep, i.e. "Sacrifice of Angels" or "Tears of the Prophets."
B.) The Starfleet Antares-class is indeed a freighter. You're getting mixed up. The Starfleet Antares has nothing to do with the Bajoran or Corvallen Antares-classes, but it is the same as the numerous other races' Antares-class freighters including the Talarians. The U.S.S. Antares (first federation ship of the type) was always a freighter. The Norkova is a modernized Antares-class Federation freighter. The Xhosa was originally Federation, and possibly even Starfleet.
 
Posted by The Mighty Monkey of Mim (Member # 646) on :
 
As to the Dominion War Galaxies being CGI, I'm sure some of them were but DS9 was still extensively using physical models, and since only one Galaxy appeared in Voyager, (the Challenger) we know that the Trinculo must have appeared in DS9. The most likely place is still the Dom. War. eps.
 
Posted by targetemployee (Member # 217) on :
 
Monkey,

I am staking a position on the Antares from "Charlie X". I am concurring with the StarTrek.Com site. In the episode synposis for that episode, the Antares is identified as "S.S. Antares".

My reasons:
1.) The Antares is never identified as a starship by the Enterprise crew.
2.) The Antares crew are not wearing standard Starfleet uniforms. They are wearing civilian uniforms. Rf. Captain Merrick of the S.S. Beagle ("Bread and Circuses"). He is wearing the beige top and black pants of his service. Captain Merrick is not Starfleet; he washed out of Starfleet and joined the civilian service.
3.) The Antares is the class ship of the Antares Class. Rf. dedication plate of the S.S. Xhosa. Mr. Okuda has stated openly in the encyclopedia that he doesn't know the meaning of "Starship Class" on the Enterprise's dedication plate. He understands his system-a class is named after the first ship in that class-not the older system proposed by the first Star Trek producers. I will not go into details on the older system for it is poorly explained and has been de-canonized out of Star Trek. This is the best evidence for the Antares Class ships in Federation service.

Continuing with point three...
The starships of Captain Kirk's time had a certain configuration ("The Doomsday Machine"). The Antares Class ships don't fit this model.

These three points for me make the Antares Class ships, and the S.S. Antares herself, a Federation civilian design.

Canonically, what is seen on screen or heard on screen, we don't know the class of the U.S.S. Hermes. She could be a member of a known or unknown class.

[ July 07, 2001: Message edited by: targetemployee ]


 
Posted by The Mighty Monkey of Mim (Member # 646) on :
 
Oh, boy, did I open up a real can of worms...

I may get swatted for doing this again, but I want to say that the Encyclopedia is canon!!! So are the other official reference materials including the TNG and DS9 Technical Manuals, the Chronologies, episode Companions, and the Fact Files. That's not to say that they're all 100% accurate all of the time, but they are legitimate parts of canon Trek.

'Starship' is a term that has shifted in meaning since TOS. In TOS, it meant a specific type of ship. You could equate it to the term 'battleship' in today's Navy. (A ship with the heaviest armor and largest guns.) But by the 24th century, it means more 'warship' (again, equating to our terms) meaning basically any ship in the Navy. Okuda exclusively uses the 24th century terminology, so that's why he calls the Antares and "Antares-class starship." That doesn't mean it would have been called a Starship in the 23rd century. Furthermore, the info for the Antares (including the U.S.S. and the NCC) and the Hermes (and pretty much all other ships) are from one of various ship display charts seen on the bridge and elsewhere in TNG. Okuda has said that this is where most all of the info in the Encyc first appeared. What he used to do was create charts of Federation ships, mostly those which had been seen or mentioned in the past, and use them as displays in the show. So, if you really want to get picky, all of that info has appeared on the screen.
 


Posted by The Mighty Monkey of Mim (Member # 646) on :
 
Forgot to mention: S.S. doesn't necessarily denote civilian ships, just those that aren't a part of the main body of Starfleet. The Beagle was a survey ship for the UESPA.

And, occaisionally, even some Starfleet ships have had S.S. prefixes. (i.e., TAS ships.) It just means that they're auxiliaries/support craft/anything other.
 


Posted by TSN (Member # 31) on :
 
The Encyclopedias, Tech Manuals, and Fact Files are not canon. "Canon" has a very specific definition, regardless of what you choose to personally accept and not accept.
 
Posted by targetemployee (Member # 217) on :
 
Monkey,

I accept your position that the term 'starship' has changed in meaning. In Star Trek, the term 'starship' referred to the capital ships of the fleet. 'Starship' in the later series came to include all ships of the Starfleet.

When I attempt to identify a ship as Starfleet, I listen or look for certain indicators. In the spoken dialogue, the indicator is 'U.S.S.' or '(Federation)' starship. Indicators for visual identification are 'U.S.S.' or the first three units of the registry, ex. 'NCC'. For the Antares, I have only the dialogue to give status as to identity. This ship is not identified with 'U.S.S.' or as a starship.

As for Mr. Okuda's encyclopedia, I feel that any reference material worth its salt should give the bibliography for stated facts. Many of the details of starships and spaceships are given without this reference. For instance, in what episode is the U.S.S. Adelphi identified as an Ambassador Class starship with the registry of NCC-26849? Or, another case, where is the diagram in "Space Seed" that allegedly has the name and registry of the U.S.S. Constitution?
 


Posted by The_Tom (Member # 38) on :
 
Um, I think citing which episode each reference comes from is more than bibliographic enough. What do you exactly have in mind for the Encyclopedia?

Tim's bascically hit the canon point on the head: canon is, by definition, neither personally-defined nor consisting of anything other than a body of work from a common source, in this case the Paramount lot.

Back on topic, every Galaxy seen since "Way of the Warrior" has almost certainly been CGI. Which seems to point to the Trinculo being custom-labeled for the sole purpose of exhibition. Which is odd, because one would think they'd just restore the 4-footer to 1701-D if they we going to the trouble of relabeling.
 


Posted by targetemployee (Member # 217) on :
 
Frell double post.

[ July 08, 2001: Message edited by: targetemployee ]


 
Posted by targetemployee (Member # 217) on :
 
My idea of the encyclopedia-

1. Omit the episode and film summaries.
2. Include the source material for name, class and registry, ex. LCAR display.
3. Do extensive research to insure accuracy and completeness.
4. Leave the notes out.
5. Finally, proofread the encyclopedia.
 


Posted by The_Tom (Member # 38) on :
 
1. Omit the episode and film summaries.

Perish the thought that acknowlegement of Trek's being fictional creep in. Besides, they're useful for cross-referencing.

2. Include the source material for name, class and registry, ex. LCAR display.

Right. "The fans" who've been clamouring for this, both of them, will be pleased.

3. Do extensive research to insure accuracy and completeness.

Um, I think the Okudas would be less than impressed to hear someone intimate they didn't do "extensive" research. Of course they did, alongside their regular jobs within a limited timeframe. They do "extensive" research for the Encyclopaedia Britannicca, too, and there are still mistakes. Live with it.

4. Leave the notes out.

Why? Most people love them... Or is this point 1 creeping in again?

5. Finally, proofread the encyclopedia.

OF COURSE IT'S FRIGGIN' PROOFREAD! But until such a time as Pocket Books can harness the mistake-finding power of millions of fanboys poring over the text for three years for the several weeks market forces dictate it must be proofread during, I think the level of perfection will not meet your Borglike expectations.
 


Posted by Sol System (Member # 30) on :
 
quote:
But until such a time as Pocket Books can harness the mistake-finding power of millions of fanboys poring over the text for three years...

Actually, taking a look at the acknowledgements from the book, you see that they have.
 




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