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Starship Concept Art - Battle of Binary Stars Fleet

Why, in fact, does the Klingon fleet look so utterly different?
This really bothers me, the Klingons have had really consistent design aesthetic over the years, and this totally kills it. The new ships don't even look particularly good. ENT's Klingon ships and K't'ingas* would have looked just fine on screen.

(*I'm perfectly fine pretending that TOS D7's and K'ti'ngas are the same, the only real difference is the surface detail.)
 
@Longinus - Agree totally, here is a view of their design consistency, from another thread a while back:

Raptor class scout ship (22nd century)
Raptor_class%2C_aft.jpg


Early bird-of-prey (22nd century)
9dAPqZh.jpg


Scout ship (22nd century)
Laneths_bird-of-prey%2C_forward.jpg


Transport ship (22nd century)
USiTuXm.jpg


D4 class battle-cruiser (22nd century) [non-canonical... thanks to producers]
tDMGhVe.jpg


D5 class battle-cruiser (22nd century, 23rd century)
RAdSHvz.jpg


D6 class battle-cruiser (22nd century, 23rd century) [non-canonical... nice transition design]
pq6uZdU.jpg


D7 class battle-cruiser - k't'inga variant (22nd century, 23rd century, 24th century)
7YBudSS.jpg


D7 class battle-cruiser - TOS variant (23rd century)
nW5FqJ7.jpg


D4 class bird-of-prey (23rd century) [Kelvin timeline]
bAE5KiI.jpg


D7 class ??? warbird (23rd century) [Kelvin timeline]
wsR85Wu.jpg


D12 / b'rel / k'vort class bird-of-prey (23rd century, 24th century)
oRMlmos.jpg


Vor'cha class attack cruiser (24th century)
WutXRxB.jpg


Transport ship (24th century)
Klingon_freighters%2C_sons_and_daughters.jpg


Negh'var class dreadnought (24th century)
e4MHzkT.jpg


Also, something I posted elsewhere, where I attempted to make the lifespan of the D7 make sense - you can kinda break it down into a few different models:

D7 - design variant 1 (ENT: aquamarine nacelles, dark hull):

Do5fGRV.jpg


D7 - design variant 2 (TOS: solid nacelles, light hull) [since this one was built differently it was never refit]:

nW5FqJ7.jpg


D7 - design variant 3 (TMP: solid nacelles, dark hull):

7YBudSS.jpg


D7 - design variant 4 (TUC: cyan nacelles, light hull):

Jiqn3OK.jpg


I know in the past most people have tended to separate the K't'inga class from the D7 class, but I suggest that the TOS D7 might be just a smooth subclass of the K't'inga.

Here is design variant 4 at the Battle of Deep Space 9 (firing a cool ass disruptor beam):

BaRLCri.jpg
 
I know in the past most people have tended to separate the K't'inga class from the D7 class, but I suggest that the TOS D7 might be just a smooth subclass of the K't'inga.

i decided long ago that D# are federation names (like all nato names for russian fighters starting with an F) and k't'inga is the klingon name for what the federation calls D7. problem solved
 
Design variant 3 appearing in The Next Generation:

urX3isU.jpg


Design variant 1 appearing in Voyager (after a decades long multi-generational voyage):

rwE7d9T.jpg


Possible fifth variant from Trials and Tribble-ations:

ufmFibM.jpg
 
I definitely keep looking for clear images of the Klingon ships. So radically different from what we've seen before. I've yet t see any images that I can stop and study.
 
To me, from the quick clips in this last episode and the flashes of the one or two in the second episode, they look like forerunners of what we'd see starting in TSFS, but a bit smaller and more maneuverable.

If you took the neck away and moved the boom section back to connect with the hull, it would be close.
 
Also, something I posted elsewhere, where I attempted to make the lifespan of the D7 make sense - you can kinda break it down into a few different models:

D7 - design variant 1 (ENT: aquamarine nacelles, dark hull):
I've said this before, but I just accept ENT K't'inga to be a mistake and ignore it. The producers said that it was a mistake, we were supposed to see some other ship. These things happen in real historical films too.
 
@KirkusOveractus The problem is that they seem to be highly "ornate" where Klingon ships are established for being "industrial", or "used future" - it's as if the Empire from Star Wars suddenly started making their ships into fine sculptures - I can understand some - but their entire fleet seems to be like that - even their birds of prey look like a sculpture with an impulse engine.
 
@KirkusOveractus The problem is that they seem to be highly "ornate" where Klingon ships are established for being "industrial", or "used future" - it's as if the Empire from Star Wars suddenly started making their ships into fine sculptures - I can understand some - but their entire fleet seems to be like that - even their birds of prey look like a sculpture with an impulse engine.
Yeah, it made sens for T'Kuvma's ship, it was basically a space cathedral and was extensively modified and decorated over time. That all of their ships would be like that it just weird.
 
@KirkusOveractus The problem is that they seem to be highly "ornate" where Klingon ships are established for being "industrial", or "used future" - it's as if the Empire from Star Wars suddenly started making their ships into fine sculptures - I can understand some - but their entire fleet seems to be like that - even their birds of prey look like a sculpture with an impulse engine.
Oh, I agree on that point. I was working more from a description of the ships seen in the last episode more from a silhouette point of view.

I could understand something with the Klingons being ornate, like the beacon, but the ships were always as you said, the industrial, function way over form style.
 
I do not get what the big deal is with wanting round Nacells. ENT showed round nacells where a thing over a 120 years before this show. I say 120, as we count all those much older pre NX designs. Other races had moved away from that type. Sorry really, round nacells are a pre-federation human design.

I for one amglad they went more TMP style with them.
 
@King Daniel Paid CBS Plant Yeah, now that you mention it:

5hCrKLr.jpg


Or a Centauri fighter from Babylon 5:

3WPfqZH.jpg


And we come to another irksome difference - gone is the Horatio Hornblower/Jack Aubery style combat - the ships move like fighters and the Discovery so far acts like an AA platform - and, yes, I know that Star Trek can change, and has changed, but I wonder why when Star Wars faithfully preserves it's well-known visual style, Star Trek does not keep the famous Battle of the Mutara Nebula style, which is a differentiating asset, rather than a burden.

yzXBGYO.png
 
I do not get what the big deal is with wanting round Nacells. ENT showed round nacells where a thing over a 120 years before this show. I say 120, as we count all those much older pre NX designs. Other races had moved away from that type. Sorry really, round nacells are a pre-federation human design.

I for one amglad they went more TMP style with them.
The Constitution Class wasn't a pre-Federation design, neither was the Kelvin.
 
About the nacelles, Eaves apparently said on Facebook that he was directed from higher-ups to give the ships non-cylindrical nacelles. So, not his decision.
these ships have to be a few years old, maybe even decades old... shenzhou was "old". they may not even be intended to fit a 2250s aesthetic.
 
The Constitution Class wasn't a pre-Federation design, neither was the Kelvin.

TOS was the 1960;s, that whole look can be ignored here. If they show the class, its not gonna look the same. The Kelvin, like wise will not look like we see as its a whole other visual style. And it was a 22nd century deign IIRC, it could be older than the walker.
 
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