Well, the Lexington as a survivor of the Battle of Sector 001 makes somewhat sense. Personally, I would have used the Endeavour as Wolf 359 survivor.
Maybe they're holo-projectors and none of these ships are real!.Perhaps there's meant to be a distortion field around those rings that magnifies the smaller ones.
Ah right, I thought it was a DS9TM thing.That figure is also from the DS9 Technical Manual entry. Alas, the Saber's measures were mistakenly copied from the Norway entry.
The USS Wersching looks like a 22nd century ship with the notch at the front of its saucer. I assume its named after the late Annie Wersching, who did have a small role on Enterprise in addition to being the Borg Queen last season.
It's an Akira class, from First Contact/DS9/VOYThe USS Wersching looks like a 22nd century ship with the notch at the front of its saucer. I assume its named after the late Annie Wersching, who did have a small role on Enterprise in addition to being the Borg Queen last season.
They probably scaled them up so they could be visble in the episode from further away.Scale seems to be a bit off for a couple of ships. The NX-01 seems bigger than the Enterprise-A, the New Jersey, and the Saratoga. Those Akiras are also huge, bigger than the Nebula class on display.
DS9 Visual Effects Supervisor David Stipes said the Saber is 190mWhat's going on with the Saber? Graphic says 364m, but the scale chart shows it at about 150m, which is closer to the previously established size.
It's an Akira class
Oh wow I don't know how I missed that.It's an Akira class, from First Contact/DS9/VOY
And it's not just the whales. It's the water.It has to be the fit those whales.
"NOTE the caption". It's a typo.
Point being that the Saratoga at the museum is actually the Saratoga from Star Trek IV, made up to look on the outside like the one lost at Wolf 359. On the inside she looks like parts of both. There are examples of this sort of thing in military museums, for example on the USS Midway there's an F-4 Phantom painted up as the one that shot down the first enemy plane in Vietnam on one side, and the plane that shot down the last one on the other side.![]()
And it's not just the whales. It's the water.
The crew stole it to go back in time and collect shrimp for the whales to eat in the never-filmed Star Trek 7: The Voyage Home II.I'm a bit surprised to see Kronos One at the museum. Why would the Klingons let Starfleet have it?
The Bounty, I understand, since it was actually USED by Starfleet personnel...
At the very least, one would think the Klingons would want to keep it for their OWN museum, amirite?
Maybe it's on loan. Or the Klingons don't feel sentimental about starships.At the very least, one would think the Klingons would want to keep it for their OWN museum, amirite?
It was where the devious Chang assassinated the Chancellor by allying himself with Romulans and humans! Azetbur probably told them to take it away and never let her see it again.I'm a bit surprised to see Kronos One at the museum. Why would the Klingons let Starfleet have it?
The Bounty, I understand, since it was actually USED by Starfleet personnel.
But I don't know what Kronos One's doing there. Especially since its sole encounter with Starfleet was, shall we say, awkward...
At the very least, one would think the Klingons would want to keep it for their OWN museum, amirite?
Historical significance.I'm a bit surprised to see Kronos One at the museum. Why would the Klingons let Starfleet have it?
Historical significance.
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