Enterprise fucked a few up personallyYet they never seem to show up at meetings.![]()
Enterprise fucked a few up personallyYet they never seem to show up at meetings.![]()
Yes but 30 years isn’t that old for a ship. Especially one that gets refit so often.Yeah but the Enterprise-E would've been over 30 years old at that point, and has seen quite a bit of action, from First Contact to Nemesis and Prodigy. So at least a case could be made for its retirement. I guess I just really, really like the Odyssey class.
If you're refering to the glimpse of a Connie engineering section seen in Best of Both Worlds part II, I wouldn't say it's definitely a Constitution class. We only see it for a second and only a part of the ship. I consider most of the wreckage in that episode to be best left unidentified.The 1701-A, being renamed, was the exception, but given it only served 7 years before being mothballed and we know Connie-refits served through 2366, it was not a young ship.
I'm not making a strong argument for it. I'm just saying that, given her service record, it is believable that she would be retired at this point. The fact that here the F gets retired is less believable.Yes but 30 years isn’t that old for a ship. Especially one that gets refit so often.
I read in one of those technical manual that the Galaxy class was designed to have a hundred year lifespan.
Books.Yes but 30 years isn’t that old for a ship. Especially one that gets refit so often.
I read in one of those technical manual that the Galaxy class was designed to have a hundred year lifespan.
The F being decommissioned has something to do with a fault in its computer system according to those Instagram logs. Not because of its age.I'm not making a strong argument for it. I'm just saying that, given her service record, it is believable that she would be retired at this point. The fact that here the F gets retired is less believable.
Star Trek 2009, Discovery Season 1 and 2 (other classe dominated). SNW Season 1 (April). Take your pick. Oh yeah. Gene.Where has this ever been stated?
Yeah just like the warp scale recalibration. Shall we discuss the Warp Factors Kirk ordered the 1701 to in TOS in a way that makes sense with Enterprise, Discovery/SNW and TNG?Again, not canon.
The Frontier Day fleet had a whole bunch of them.
If you're refering to the glimpse of a Connie engineering section seen in Best of Both Worlds part II, I wouldn't say it's definitely a Constitution class. We only see it for a second and only a part of the ship. I consider most of the wreckage in that episode to be best left unidentified.
This is getting too much into the weeds to explain fully. Of course, the CO can establish general rules for the operation of the ship or pursue disciplinary action against crewmen. However, there are corps that are semi-autonomous, where the captain mostly consults with the department head but has no direct authority over. The captain cannot say how the wounded are triaged. I offer this up as possible way that a relationship works because the main leadership would not be responsible for the performance review of a medical professional. At least on a base, the relationship might be acceptable.How can any officer on the ship not be under the CO or XO's heirarchy?
Not a book fan I take it?Books.![]()
Love the books. I just see no point in citing them.Not a book fan I take it?
They’re written but Probert and other designers of the ships. I’m not dismissing them because it’s in a book.
Chancellorville should never have been honored in the first place. Traitors don't need memorials.I mean the US Navy, which Starfleet is based on, did this JUST last month, when they renamed the 29 year old cruiser USS Chancellorsville to USS Robert Smalls, as part of their removal of Confederate names from the US Military. The Robert Smalls had a storied career as teh Chancellorsville, which honors a confederate victory. And because it's a Ticonderoga-class cruiser, the ship is probably going to be out of service by 2026, but they still renamed it.
Not a top of the line model.
I never said anything about age for the F. I believe I made my point very clear.The F being decommissioned has something to do with a fault in its computer system according to those Instagram logs. Not because of its age.
Not sure how you're disagreeing with me. Plenty of models in that scene were kitbashes, so they used parts from existing designs. What I'm saying is that this might be the case for this one too.Okay well, I do need to disagree with you on this. The Constitution hull was the enterprise hull from TSFS, and the saucer was the enterprises also.
I never said anything about age for the F. I believe I made my point very clear.
Not sure how you're disagreeing with me. Plenty of models in that scene were kitbashes, so they used parts from existing designs. What I'm saying is that this might be the case for this one too.
A good example of this is that the oldest of the Arleigh Burke class destroyers of the US Navy are going to start retiring close to 2030, but new ones being produced now and will be produced through the early 2030s will likely serve into the 2060s and 2070s. They're substantially different than what first launched in the late 1980 and the new ones differ from the serving old ones, despite upgrades.Yeah but the Enterprise-E would've been over 30 years old at that point, and has seen quite a bit of action, from First Contact to Nemesis and Prodigy. So at least a case could be made for its retirement. I guess I just really, really like the Odyssey class.
The Enterprise was simply described as Starfleet's newest flagship. That probably has more to do with the name, rather then the class. For all we know, Starfleet had cracked out a two dozen Constitution class ships by then.Star Trek 2009
We only know that the Enterprise was launched in 2245 and that there were "12 like her in the fleet", according to Kirk in TOS. For all we know, that could simply mean there were only 12 Connie's outfitted like the Enterprise, as I'm sure they made more then only 12. We also have no idea when the USS Constitution herself was launched. For all we know, it was launched 10 years before the Enterprise. Nothing has ever been stated canonically and don't even start with trying to use the registry numbers.Discovery Season 1 and 2
Where was this stated?SNW Season 1
Gene said alot of things we routinely ignore.Oh yeah. Gene
Acting credits on shows and movies are very tightly regulated by the Screen Actor's Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists. Starring, Co-Starring, Special Guest Star, "featuring ____", "and____" aren't left up to the producers, but rather a function of union negotiation with the studio about how labor translates to compensation. This matters more for bit players, character actors and unknowns than it does the biggest stars, but it's standardized across all productions so everyone's labor rights are protected. Hollywood has a long history of fucking performers when it comes to compensation.
Even things like "short" intros without credits in film and TV, and "intro titles" being moved to the end of the show (like Picard) only started to happen in the last 20 years because of negotiations between studios and the union. Any examples before this century were negotiated on a case-by-case basis. Some productions had to get special dispensation on provable artistic grounds for moving around credits and what credit people recieved. It's also not even up to the performer, but rather the guild. Though performers can take roles uncredited, which is what John de Lancie did for Q in the finale. If he elected not to, he would get a Special Guest Star tag too, likely in an additional credits sequence (this is what happened in Loki in the after credits scene when Old Loki, Kid Loki and Boastful Loki were revealed.
The "Special Guest Star" label, was likely tied to the TNG actors only receiving compensation for the Episodes they were involved in, whereas Picard, Seven and Rafii all got paid for every episode (and indeed, were in every episode). They were contracted for the season, whereas the TNG cast was contracted for episodes (Frakes, as a director would have another contract specifically for that, through the Directors Guild.
Perhaps it's the reason behind the inclusion, sure. It's just hard to believe that Starfleet to send a 100+ year old ship to fight the Borg, of all things.Im meaning that I want to say I read an interview that they used that specific debris very intentionally
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