^^But not as much as on the refit Enterprise. I read once that that was the most detailed miniature spaceship ever created, as of 1979, anyway. Although I'd imagine Greg Jein's Close Encounters mothership would be a close competitor.
^^But not as much as on the refit Enterprise. I read once that that was the most detailed miniature spaceship ever created, as of 1979, anyway. Although I'd imagine Greg Jein's Close Encounters mothership would be a close competitor.
No you don't. The refit 1701 has absolutely nothing to do with this argument... that's like saying, "Well, if the Americans just refitted the U.S.S. Nimitz, then obviously, we Russians MUST refit our Kiev-Class ships."... that makes no sense. Even if the Klingons did want to refit their fleet, to cope with a new space race or whatever, it wouldn't happen for some time... at the time of TMP, Decker told Admiral Kirk that the Enterprise was an entirely new ship... NEW... that means that she was the only currently refitted Connie out there, with presumably more to follow... and TMP was her shakedown cruise.
It could also be argued that Starfleet's decision to refit the NCC-1701 to such a massive extent (as opposed to commissioning an entirely new starship class which would have presumably taken more time) was precisely because of the clear and present threat posed to the UFP by the relatively sudden appearance of the K't'ingas.
TGT
One would expect the inevitable spacecraft/weapons technology R&D feedback loop between the UFP and Klingon Empire to make such a scenario rather unlikely
One would expect the inevitable spacecraft/weapons technology R&D feedback loop between the UFP and Klingon Empire to make such a scenario rather unlikely
But one might also take into consideration that a lot of the adversaries to the Klingon Empire are going to be less advanced than the Federation, all the way down to bronze-age cultures.
Really, if 17th century warships had had longer structural lives, the British Empire might well have preferred to keep the oldest ones in service alongside the more modern ones, so that modern shipbuilding effort could be directed at defeating the French or the Spanish, and existing resources could hold the rest of the Empire together.
The Soviets had the art down pat: their navy ran even the most obsolete rust buckets until they were so low in the water that their keels no longer cleared the harbor bottom, after which the wrecks became barracks or depots. Some of the largest ships like the Sverdlov cruisers were also rescued from complete obsolescence through refits, a move that might make economical sense for the Klingons and their largest battle cruisers as well.
Timo Saloniemi
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