I always felt like the Enterprise-J was overcompensating in the Saucer section I mean Look at the size of that thingFaith of the grossly enlarged heart.![]()

I always felt like the Enterprise-J was overcompensating in the Saucer section I mean Look at the size of that thingFaith of the grossly enlarged heart.![]()
the replica set already existed, they didn’t build it for this show.
The ship is 2 miles long and 2 miles wide at its widest. Its probably double that in the DiscoVerse.I always felt like the Enterprise-J was overcompensating in the Saucer section I mean Look at the size of that thing![]()
It looks like they touched it up though. The texturing looks different, they added damage from the crash to the saucer.It’s the same CGI model they did for season one: it has the same error in the bussard collectors (three instead of two for each nacelle).
They did contact one of the replica groups, but their set was too heavy so they made their own from scratch.the replica set already existed, they didn’t build it for this show.
The F is a beauty queen compared with the J.
The ship is 2 miles long and 2 miles wide at its widest. Its probably double that in the DiscoVerse.![]()
Something they made up.What is the DiscoVerse?
Don't embed Wiki images.I always felt like the Enterprise-J was overcompensating in the Saucer section I mean Look at the size of that thing![]()
No. Not a retcon. He died, and Fury drug him through an agonizing experimental medical procedure to resurrect him.Phil Coulson in Agents of Shield being a prime example
The universe where Discovery and SNW are set where things are bigger for no reason. I know its supposed to be the same universe as Prime but I don't see it that way.What is the DiscoVerse?
And at the end, he still died from that attack.No. Not a recon. He died, and Fury drug him through an agonizing experimental medical procedure to resurrect him.
But he was dead. For DAYS.
A fantasyWhat is the DiscoVerse?
That's not how it works.The universe where Discovery and SNW are set where things are bigger for no reason. I know its supposed to be the same universe as Prime but I don't see it that way.
They made a LMD Coulson droid afterwards and while SHIELD initially treated him as different than the actual Coulson, eventually they just basically treated him as Coulson resurrected on par with how Picard's characters basically treat post-S1 android Picard.And at the end, he still died from that attack.
There's no canon evidence they're any bigger than what we saw in TOS.The universe where Discovery and SNW are set where things are bigger for no reason.
There's no canon evidence they're any bigger than what we saw in TOS.
Yes but TOS Enterprise size isn't canon, that is what I meant.The Enterprise's dedication plaque in Strange New Worlds clearly lists its length as 442m.
After watching TOS "That Which Survives" again I realized that there's just some elements of Star Trek canon that are inconsistent. The travel times established for the Enterprise NCC-1701 in that episode basically show that Voyager could have gotten home in a month. The fact that after all these decades no episode has ever addressed the inconsistency between TOS and TNG warp speeds (and why the latter is so much slower), eventually you just have to throw up your hands and realize, per Shatner's SNL character, "It's just a tv show". I definitely try to make my own headcanon even for SNW (bridge modules, the 1701 was refit multiple times), but the warp speeds are probably the biggest inconsistency for which there is no easy fix.The Enterprise's dedication plaque in Strange New Worlds clearly lists its length as 442m.
Also – we saw the Enterprise next to the Discovery, and we know how ludicrously big the Discovery is.
Enterprise-F is ugly as hell. Certainly the least attractive of all the Enterprises. In the same crappy design style of whatever that fleet of ships was at the end of Picard Season 1. The TMP refit and 1701A remain the gold standard.
Think you might be reading a bit too much into it.
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