As for the Intrepid... I'd say first. At the time it was nearly completed the admiral said it featured the EMH which Starfleet started putting on its other ships.
[ September 23, 2001: Message edited by: Soundwave ]
In all seriousness, I'd have to say the Intrepid class entered service first. In one of the TNG episodes, LaForge was having an engine-efficiency battle going on with the chief engineer of the USS Intrepid. Now, this could have been the old Excelsior on her final mission or the new Intrepid on trial runs. Either way, though, it could have been possible for that class to enter service within TNG's time frame.
The Sovereign seems to be a more advanced ship. The Sickbay modules are identical, and both come equipped with an EMH program. But Voyager (or was it Intrepid class?) was the testbed for the system. The Sovereign has the capability to fire quantum torpedoes, while the Intrepid does not. Of course, a small explorer like the Intrepid may not need those powerful weapons.
Aside from my ramblings, it's too close to really tell. Plus, there are no canon dates for construction and entering service. Both were probably in development for a while, though.
[ September 23, 2001: Message edited by: Siegfried ]
The Enterprise-E was the second vessel built of the Sovereign class, and was built in 2372.
Seems pretty clear to me.
Seven of Nine knew about the First Contact incident, and she joined Voyager at the end of season 3/beginning season 4, which is end 2372/begining 2373.
So the Enterprise-E commission date is the beginning of the year 2372 at most. It cannot be later than that, since they were in service for a year in First Contact.
As for it's earliest commission date: There is a gap of a few months between "All Good Things..." and "Caretaker". So the Enterprise-E could have been commissioned just before Voyager, but mere weeks at best.
I do however remember making a timeline of my own once in which I had put the destruction of the Enterprise-D after Voyager went to the Delta Quadrant.
Well, I think it's time to re-watch some movies and see if there are any stardates given.
[ September 24, 2001: Message edited by: NightWing ]
The Enterprise-D was destroyed on stardate 48600.something.. stardate given in the movie, in a log entry but i dont have it at my fingertips right now. Thats a third of a year AFTER Voyager was lost.
And, at least according to supposition in the chronology, there was a period of 'down time' and the E-D crew didnt get a ship til 2372, probably in the first half of the year. So the new Enterprise was commissioned almost a year after Voyager was lost
> My statement about it being the second Sovereign was supposition, but is the most likely explanation why there are no Sovereign-class ships common.
But the fact remains that in real life, the Sovereign was designed at paramount pictures about a year and a half after the intrepid was designed at paramount pictures, and was intended to look much more advanced if that helps.
What does seven of nine have to do with it.. i dont get that?
From the plaques:
Enterprise-E was launched on SD 49027.5.. January, 2372 .. a year and a half before First Contact (which took place in late 2373 according to the above evidence)
Voyager was launched on SD 48038.5.. a couple months before testing the doctor and getting lost, shortly after AGT and half a year before Generations, and almost exactly one year before the E-E commissioning and two and a half years before First Contact.
Seven of Nine joined in the beginning of season 4, which corresponds to 2374, and would be at least a few months after first contact
[ September 24, 2001: Message edited by: CaptainMike ]
And I thought she mentioned the Enterprise, or at least the fact that they were stopped...
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And even though the Enterprise-E destroyed the cube and the sphere, they probly still got word back to the Borg through the queen (since the 'Alice Krige' queen survived to be in 'Endgame')
I suggest that, from now on, rather than converting the dates, we could start referring to stardate years. So, for example, if the E-E was launched on SD49027.5, we could just say "the beginning of year 49", rather than "January 2372" (since it might have actually been something like July). If we want to be kind of cheesy, we could even say "staryear 49". And, since the hundreds place is a '0', it's the first tenth (best not to call it a month).
I'll go back and convert the stuff that's been talked about here:
SY48:
1st tenth: VOY launched
4th tenth: VOY lost in DQ
7th tenth: E-D destroyed
SY49:
1st tenth: E-E launched
SY50:
9th tenth: FC
SY51:
1st tenth: Seven leaves collective
3rd-5th tenths: "Year of Hell"
[ September 24, 2001: Message edited by: TSN ]
What is the evidence that the SD system has shifted anyway? Id be interested to know
If we could assume that they were both from the original production run of their classes, and were commissioned at or near the same time as the class ship was completed or at least when the class ship completed spaceworthiness trials.
But thats really 'if we could assume'
The evidence for a different stardate system is in one of the last few episodes of VOY. They celebrate "First Contact Day", or some such thing, which is supposed to be the anniversary of Terro-Vulcan first contact (which we know, from the movie of the same name, was in April). But this episode is late in the season. So, apparently, the VOY writers have now decided that the episodes of a season more closely fit around the time of year that they air, rather than a season showing events from January to December.
ill try not to think of it..
The Borg attack of TNG season 3/4 turnover came when the Picard vineyard was experiencing what looked like late summer (the exact positioning of constellation Orion notwithstanding). The Thanksgiving came in midseason, TOS 1st season (let's forget about the TOS stardates for now, though). I'm sure there's a DS9 reference as well, if I dig deeply enough.
It's just that Trek has always been produced so that the season began when the summer ended. It's not something specific to VOY, and it's highly unlikely that the writers would have fought against this reality in the previous shows and then suddenly dropped the pretense just for VOY.
Timo Saloniemi