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His ship was not mentioned in the episode. It might have been mentioned in the novelization because I read bits of the book and it mentions a ship beginning with "N" but I don't remember the name or if it was his ship. Although the name Nelson pops into my head.
------------------ 7 alarm clock: "Do not touch me." Dilbert: "Then how do I turn you off?" 7: "Believe me, I am plenty turned off."
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I believe it's the Nebula-class ship. I don't know about a name. Actually I would of thought the Intrepid-class USS Bellerephon should of been his ship. Plus it would of been nice to see in battle with the other Federation ships.
------------------ Sisko: "We run alright, run right at them." Smiley: "Ah, Pattern Suicide." Federation Starship Datalink - On that annoying Tripod server.
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The novelization mentioned the USS Faragut as Ross' ship. However, the neaubula-class farragut was destroied by the klingons several years earlier. There was a re-comissioned excelsior class farragut seen in an epssode taking place after the destruction of the first. However, i doguht that the admiral's ship in a battle like the Battle of carddassia would be an excelsior calls ship. Maybe the excelsior class farragut was destroeid, and was replaced by another farragut.
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While I'm no big fan of having the latter-day Farragut be an Excelsior, it would be fitting to have a ship of this class serve as the flagship of Admiral Ross. So far, the vast majority of flagships in TNG and DS9 have been of Excelsior class, at least per the Encyclopedia.
The Bellerophon of "Inter Arma.." fame probably wasn't in any way related to Admiral Ross. Instead, she was probably the preferred long-range courier vessel of Starfleet Command at the time because of the high inherent speed of the Intrepid class. Such speed would be meaningless in the final DS9 battle, since the fleet had to move at the speed of the slowest Miranda relic anyway.
And if it was somebody aboard the Bellerophon who was doing the transporter trickery that saved Sloane, we could assume the ship was at the beck and call of Section 31. The organization might not have wished to sacrifice the ship in the "WYLB" battle, and would covertly have arranged for her not to be used there.
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I mean, ships won't have a maximum speed, since they can accelerate until they hit the speed of light, or any other set limit (like the .25c impulse one). With regards to maximum acceleration, the Sitak and Majestic didn't seem to have any trouble keeping up with the Defiant.
------------------ June is National Accordion Awareness Month. "I love being British. We don't have to do any real work, we sit around looking smug, pointing at the US and saying 'We used to be young like that once.' Then we drink tea." - Liam Ka--thingy
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The Treknobabble explanation for the Excelsior-Class Farragut (in case anyone cares) is that after the Nebula Class Farragut was lost the retired Excelsior Class Farragut was brought out of mothballs and returned to service. Given the "Frankenstein Fleet", I'd say Starfleet was putting just about any ship that could make warp onto the lines, so that explanation flies with me. I'm just wondering why the Constitution Class ship in the Fleet Museum wasn't reactivated.
(I'm not serious about that last bit: IMO the Constitution Class ship in the Fleet Museum is the USS Excalibur, and it was never fully repaired after M5 killed the crew. This would explain why Picard instantly recognized the pre-refit bridge (he commented that there was one in the Fleet Museum). Another ship likely in the Museum is the Enterprise-A as an example of a _post_ refit Constitution Class. That ship will not reenter service unless it is absolutely vital, will not have it's name changed under any circumstances, and will probably not be reactivated as long as there is a ship named Enterprise in service.)
------------------ You're a Starfleet Officer. "Weird" is part of the job.
[This message has been edited by spyone (edited June 26, 2000).]
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Altair - were you serious about those impulse engines on the Miranda torpedo pods? This is highly interesting.
How do they manifest? As constant red glow identical in color to that of the main impulse engine nozzle glow? What episode would you recommend? Any screencap sites?
Could it be that this is just the "loaded torp bay glow" we saw e.g. in the Klingon ships in TMP? TNG-era torps are deep red, after all, and could glow much the same as impulse engines. OTOH, why would the ships be flying with the doors to loaded aft torp tubes hanging open?
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I believe the ship in the museum may actually be the abandoned USS Exeter.
------------------ "The things hollow--it goes on forever--and--oh my God!--it's full of stars!" -David Bowman's last transmission back to Earth, 2001: A Space Odyssey