Tough question.
As far as personal impact, my gut wrenched seeing good old 1701 (No bloody "A"!) breaking apart and streaking across the upper atmosphere to her death. I guess the reasons were twofold. First, that ship, more than any other, carried my imagination to places previously unconsidered to a kid, even a kid like me that grew up watching moonshots on TV and lucky enough to see one Saturn V lift with my own eyes.
Second, she was robbed of a good fight, already battle damaged and then waylayed by a chickenshit little Klingon ship that barely outclassed a couple of shuttlecraft. While that may have been a good day to die, Enterprise did not die a terribly good death. It was needed for the story as written, of course, but...
My other choice? Pegasus died a good death. While the needs of the few, or even the one can sometimes outweigh the needs of the many, Pegasus insured the survival of humanity in her death. She went down as a warship should, fighting tooth and nail till the very end.
AG
As far as personal impact, my gut wrenched seeing good old 1701 (No bloody "A"!) breaking apart and streaking across the upper atmosphere to her death. I guess the reasons were twofold. First, that ship, more than any other, carried my imagination to places previously unconsidered to a kid, even a kid like me that grew up watching moonshots on TV and lucky enough to see one Saturn V lift with my own eyes.
Second, she was robbed of a good fight, already battle damaged and then waylayed by a chickenshit little Klingon ship that barely outclassed a couple of shuttlecraft. While that may have been a good day to die, Enterprise did not die a terribly good death. It was needed for the story as written, of course, but...
My other choice? Pegasus died a good death. While the needs of the few, or even the one can sometimes outweigh the needs of the many, Pegasus insured the survival of humanity in her death. She went down as a warship should, fighting tooth and nail till the very end.
AG