Like I keep saying, realistically, it wouldn't have been any version of "1701," because that number belonged to the specific physical piece of hardware that was commanded by April, Pike, and Kirk in the 2240s-80s. The numbers don't serve the same purpose as ship names. They're attached to the physical vessels themselves, not the abstract ideas or traditions associated with them.
Besides, there was no point in the entirety of TOS when any character actually
mentioned the registry number of the
Enterprise. It was just a background detail. If people wanted to talk about the ship, they'd just talk about the
Enterprise. It's just an aspect of fannish nostalgia and sentiment that we got so attached to that number that later productions started treating it as iconic in its own right. And I don't like it when storytelling gets influenced by out-of-universe fannish sentiment at the expense of in-universe plausibility. It's silly to romanticize something functional and incidental like a serial number. It wouldn't have diminished TNG in any way if the
Enterprise's registry number there had been something like NCC-62984. Sure, it would've cost us the convenience of talking about the
Enterprise-D as opposed to the
Enterprise-C, say, but the need to do that rarely actually came up in the stories anyway. There would've been other, just slightly longer phrases that could've been used instead (e.g. "the previous
Enterprise," "Garrett's
Enterprise," "the
Ambassador-class
Enterprise," etc.).
I agree completely. It's like if the US Navy had designated the carrier Enterprise in the 60's as CV-6-A instead of CVN-65, or if the next one was going to be CVN-6-B instead of CVN-80. Would make no sense and serve no purpose. USN carriers have been numbered sequentially with type since the first one. Same for other types of ships, which is why you could have USS Kitty Hawk (CV-63) and USS Missouri (BB-63) in the fleet around the same time.
Yes, this, exactly. The original TOS writers' bible (or rather, the season 2 edition) spent its first several pages drilling prospective writers on verisimilitude by asking them to imagine whether a situation in a Trek episode would make sense if transposed to a present-day Naval vessel. If it wouldn't be done in real life, they didn't want it to be done in their show. It's a standard that's all too often been ignored in later productions.
and would go a bit further: maybe it shouldn't have even been another Constitution class ship. Too much of ST# and ST4 are just big damn re-set buttons. They got bold and changed the status quo in ST2 - crew getting older and maybe ready to move on, Spock's dead, Kirk's got a son, etc. But wait, in ST3 we get rid of the kid and bring Spock back. Lost the Enteprrise in Trek 3? No probs, Starfleet happened to have spare lying about and the get it in ST4. Oh and that new Vulcan from ST2? Noo worry, we'll just ditch her in ST4. Yawn. I really wish they'd been willing to take a few more chances with these films.
Absolutely. It's frustrating how both the TOS and TNG movie series shy away from any major changes and insist on hitting the reset button over and over, undoing any significant change within two movies, and only allowing permanent changes (like Sulu or Riker getting a captaincy) to happen in the final film.