I like to think that the Enterprise-B is still in service, as a training ship for Cadets, a museum ship for visitors, and a large part of Earth's Home Fleet for emergencies.
Simple. At this point they had all been in Starfleet for around 30 plus years. Even military organizations in the future have time limits on service, particularly service members who can't move up in rank anymore. We've seen numerous examples of the rigid selection process just to get into the academy and how hard it is to graduate. Surely the same rules apply for how long you can serve and how many people can serve in Starfleet at a time.I never really gave this much thought until a recent viewing of Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country. It wasn't clear to me why the crew and the Enterprise were decommissioned. The real world explanation is obvious: it was the final TOS film, but, within the movie itself, it seems completely out of the blue.
Early in the film Kirk mentions to Spock the crew is due to "stand down in three months." Spock even mentions that it will be his final voyage aboard the Enterprise. Everything clearly suggests the crew is going to be retiring soon (if that's what "standing down" is supposed imply), but, it seemed to have been expedited at the very end. At one point, I even thought it was Starfleet, essentially, punishing the crew for failing to obey their orders by returning to report back to spacedock.
Anyone have thoughts on this?
I thought it was because the ship and crew were all old.
Because Excelsior.And I'm still waiting for someone to give me a satisfactory answer as to why the Miranda class (a contemporary to the Constitution class) was still in service during DS9 when the Constitution class wasn't?
Because Excelsior.
Sadly.
It did not.And 'Excelsior' didn't affect the Miranda class?
It did not.
It was not big enough.Why?
It was not big enough.
More idle speculation than anything else. Honestly, it sucks that the Excelsiors replaced the Constitution for reasons that are completely unknown to me. It's an ugly ship that had no business going in to the TNG era.Ah, I see. This is bullshit hour for Fireproof78.
And most hours are BS hours for me. I don't get paid enough to take this seriously any more.None taken.
And I'm still waiting for someone to give me a satisfactory answer as to why the Miranda class (a contemporary to the Constitution class) was still in service during DS9 when the Constitution class wasn't?
- Smaller overall target profile from all angles. Shorter, less vulnerable under-slung nacelle pylons protected by saucer from high aspect targeting. No thin, vulnerable neck section to exploit.And I'm still waiting for someone to give me a satisfactory answer as to why the Miranda class (a contemporary to the Constitution class) was still in service during DS9 when the Constitution class wasn't?
The crew was indeed old. The ship, however, was only 7 years old at that point, if one is to believe that the ship was built during the Whale Probe incident.
And I'm still waiting for someone to give me a satisfactory answer as to why the Miranda class (a contemporary to the Constitution class) was still in service during DS9 when the Constitution class wasn't?
I always took the gap between C and D to be out of respect for the dead. the crew wasn't lost with the original or AEnterprise NCC-1701 - destroyed over Genesis planet
Enterprise NCC-1701-A - decommissioned, final fate unknown
Enterprise-B - final fate unknown
Enterprise-C - destroyed by Romulans at Narendra III
Enterprise-D - destroyed by Duras sisters
Enterprise-E - final fate unknown
Since at least half of the Enterprises above were destroyed, I really don't like to think that the B also suffered the same fate, but since other Excelsior class starships are still active during TNG, there should be no reason why the B also shouldn't be active by that time as well. There are only three possibilities:
1. It was destroyed.
2. It was decommissioned and scrapped to make way for the C.
3. It was recommissioned under another name and registry number, or recommissioned as the Enterprise-B after the C was destroyed (since there was a 20 year gap between the destruction of the C and the commissioning of the D in which there was no Enterprise in service, which I find quite odd.)
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