It's fairly popular among some of the fan-base as well. It's in Star Trek Online, and eaglemoss also made a model of it.
It was never really intended for ENT season 5. It was really just Doug evolving his design closer to TOS for a calender image IIRC.
It was never really intended for ENT season 5. It was really just Doug evolving his design closer to TOS for a calender image IIRC.
I think the altered version looks wrong for that design, proportionally. Not everything needs to be made to look like the original Enterprise.
Although there were starships before and after, it’s important that during TOS era, starships were talked about as the kinds of vessels that very specifically needed crews of 430 or so
You're right as in the way that it was never confirmed for Season 5, but Doug said he did pitch the idea before the series was cancelled. So we'll never really know if it would have been approved or not.It was never really intended for ENT season 5. It was really just Doug evolving his design closer to TOS for a calender image IIRC.
The novels treat Drexler's design as the Columbia class of starships, consisting of one proof-of-concept refit of an Enterprise class ship (the Endeavour) and a small bunch of newbuilds, compromise-ridden vessels plagued by teething troubles and the woes of multicultural design input. And no, there never was a refit of the actual NX-01 in the novel continuity - the wreck of that one became a museum specimen in the original config, in harmony with offhand "TAtV" remarks. And no, there never was a Columbia class USS Columbia, either - the class name was decided upon for esoteric sentimental reasons... Complex and convoluted enough to feel like real-world naval practices, I guess.
I mean, to an extent. The ship certainly does a couple things we've never seen the 1701 do on-screen.anybody read the new novel "enterprise war"? i keep seeing reviews that say it dives deep into the mechanics of the ship...
I feel like there's a bit of a lag in Star Trek tie-ins adjusting to the current era having a very different perspective on continuity and tech than we became used to in the Berman era (if not reaching back to TMP, or even the Franz Joseph books correlating and expanding on what was scene in TOS after-the-fact). It's generally been pretty vague in the novel, but it does have mentions that are meant to be consistent with the Discoprise being a temporary variation between "The Cage" and TOS (or just as easily ignored). The upcoming Eaglemoss book, on the other hand, has to, by its very nature, tie itself into knots and use a lot of slight-of-hand to prevent the DSC visuals from being a retcon, so it can include the TOS versions of models, sets, props, and costumes. It's a weird flip on the old days when tech manuals were filling in the gaps and smoothing out contradictions; now they're making everything more baroque and complex rather than redefining the status quo to account for the new material. I wonder if TOS-R had never happened, if they'd also be throwing in retractable nacelle-spikes and a telescoping bridge module to account for stock footage in TOS using all the different versions of the model interchangeably.I really think people should ignore that 'laser' reference in The Cage.
Update on those Eaglemoss and Novelverse books trying to retcon the Discoprise as a temporary refit: The forthcoming Short Trek focussed on Spock joining the ship features the Disovery version of the USS Enterprise... years prior to "The Cage"I feel like there's a bit of a lag in Star Trek tie-ins adjusting to the current era having a very different perspective on continuity and tech than we became used to in the Berman era (if not reaching back to TMP, or even the Franz Joseph books correlating and expanding on what was scene in TOS after-the-fact). It's generally been pretty vague in the novel, but it does have mentions that are meant to be consistent with the Discoprise being a temporary variation between "The Cage" and TOS (or just as easily ignored). The upcoming Eaglemoss book, on the other hand, has to, by its very nature, tie itself into knots and use a lot of slight-of-hand to prevent the DSC visuals from being a retcon, so it can include the TOS versions of models, sets, props, and costumes. It's a weird flip on the old days when tech manuals were filling in the gaps and smoothing out contradictions; now they're making everything more baroque and complex rather than redefining the status quo to account for the new material. I wonder if TOS-R had never happened, if they'd also be throwing in retractable nacelle-spikes and a telescoping bridge module to account for stock footage in TOS using all the different versions of the model interchangeably.
I really think people should ignore that 'laser' reference in The Cage.
Yeah, for that Eaglemoss Enterprise book I'd ignore the Discoprise and simply incorporate her into a seperate tech book including other Discovery stuff - I'd likely end up buying both and I doubt I'd be the only one, lolUpdate on those Eaglemoss and Novelverse books trying to retcon the Discoprise as a temporary refit: The forthcoming Short Trek focussed on Spock joining the ship features the Disovery version of the USS Enterprise... years prior to "The Cage"
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