He said if the saucer hadn't been destroyed i.e. no crash. Repairing a bit of battle damage to the saucer definitely would have been more cost effective than building a new one.Doubtful. For the resources needed to build a new one and make repairs to the saucer it would be just as cost effective to commission an entirely new ship.
What if in ST Generations The saucer was not destroyed when the core breached?
Would Starfleet have replaced the Stardrive?
I think it was going to be decommissioned anyway.The saucer hadn't crashed but still would've been hit with the full force of the matter/antimatter explosion from the warp core which probably wouldn't have been good for the structural integrity. The ship also took multiple hull shredding hits, in TUC the Enterprise-A only had one hull breach but was decommissioned following that battle.
If the saucer went to to a junk yard it may have been used to replace another galaxy class saucer that got trashed in the dominion war. We saw a bunch of Galaxies were in the war, would seem to make sense they they could uses the Ent-d's old saucer with repairs then building a new one since they need as many ships as they could get ASAP in the war.
The saucer wasn't really damaged all that badly. It just crashed. As opposed to the stardrive section, which was blown to bits. In-universe, it would have made more sense to just salvage the saucer (which they'd have to do anyway to get it off the planet), repair it, and reattach it to a new stardrive section that was undoubtedly being assembled at the time, as opposed to designing and building an entirely new ship.
In the novel “Rogue Saucer”, which is set in TNG’s with season, just before “Generations”, Starfleet had just had the saucer undergo major refit and upgrades—-so much was done that Starfleet had the E-D flying around with a prototype saucer for a while, testing it while the main saucer was undergoing its refit. (It explains why the bridge looked so different from “All Good Things” to “Generations” and the change for Stellar Cartography.). So if the saucer only needed minor repairs, they could’ve just repaired it.
From the book jacket it was an experimental saucer designed to survive crash landings.Been a while since I read the book, but wasn't that Saucer beefed up for the test?
I don’t recall if it was fully finished or just at the point where they could do the test to see if it could crash and then blast back into orbit.
The saucer would have suffer massive structural damage during the crash which would have been compounded by the landing - the saucer wasn't designed to support it's own weight so would have crushed the lower decks just be resting on the surface of Veridian III.
But the saucer was specifically designed as a lifeboat that was meant to land on a planet in an emergency and keep its structural integrity intact.
https://i.stack.imgur.com/X93fW.png
So I'm sure the saucer was salvageable.
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