posted
I was casually capturing some images of the Yamaguchi (DS9 Emissary footage) when the image of this peculiar ship perplexed me again. Not sure why I ignored it before, but it could be a candidate for the Gage I suppose.
Inverted:
I posed the question to Bernd and he recalled a consensus from some time ago that decided on this being the Melbourne. But judging by the status of the Melbourne seen some time earlier, I query that:
So could this ship be the Gage? To me it resembles a Constellation saucer, but recalling Legato's statement that he believed the Gage comprised of 'probably' Reliant parts doesn't necessarily cloud the issue, for a Constellation model could definitely be another candidate for the template used for any Gage model. One was most certainly made at some point, but the footage from what we know was cut.
If it isn't the Gage, or a regular Constellation or Miranda, what could it be? The other known ships of this battle sequence (a Nebula, Excelsior, Ambassador and Oberth) don't to me resemble this artefact.
-------------------- "To the Enterprise and the Stargazer. Old girlfriends we'll never meet again." - Scotty
posted
It's the Melbourne. Not the Excelsior-class but the Nebula-class Melbourne.
-------------------- "Never give up. And never, under any circumstances, no matter what - never face the facts." - Ruth Gordon
Registered: Mar 2000
| IP: Logged
Amasov Prime
lensfare-induced epileptic shock
Member # 742
posted
The first one is the Nebula-Melbourne, the second ship the Excelisior-Melbourne. Look at the saucer. Allthough it looked like the wreck hit the cube this seems to be the Melbourne-wreck. Either still supposed to be the USS Melbourne or any other Excelsior-class ship. Maybe the Roosevelt. (Or was that supposed to be a Miranda?)
-------------------- "This is great. Usually it's just cardboard walls in a garage."
Registered: Nov 2001
| IP: Logged
posted
In your inverted picture, you can see the two mini-nacelles at the upper-right end of the ship. Definitely the TBoBW Melbourne.
Registered: Mar 1999
| IP: Logged
posted
God, I remember that piece of wreckage from. . . years ago. I remember winding people up by saying how much it looks like the underside of an Intrepid saucer. 8)
posted
Says the Star Trek website. Says the official Starlog summary of the episode. And, most likely, says a draft of the script. So, FG, I am not speaking out of my ass.
Registered: Sep 2002
| IP: Logged
posted
Fine then, if thats the case, then everything that was seen in the "Emissary" was the second wave...including the Melbourne and Saratoga...so it says the Star Trek website...
-------------------- Hey, it only took 13 years for me to figure out my password...
Registered: Jan 2003
| IP: Logged
posted
Well I suppose the Melbourne is possible with the presence of what could be those two small nacelles, but I don't see much of a resemblance to a Nebula Saucer here. The saucer seems improperly stretched along the Z axis, not the X, and there seems to be the existence of many unfamiliar hull protrusions, particularly the bridge module, and other various greeblies.
It almost looks as though those 'Melbourne nacelles' aren't even attached to this saucer, as if they lie some way behind it.
-------------------- "To the Enterprise and the Stargazer. Old girlfriends we'll never meet again." - Scotty