Dingle Fritz
Lieutenant
According to the Tech Manual the secondary hull has room for a second computer core, so there would be no loss of functionality in that regard.
Okay, I'm gonna hafta kitbash a combat saucer on a Galaxy class now.
Okay, I'm gonna hafta kitbash a combat saucer on a Galaxy class now.![]()
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^ You might've been able to make the "bigger is better in combat" argument until Sisko's Defiant came along. That ship rewrote all the rules in the TREK Universe.
The only reasonable explanation is that the saucer gives it stronger shields. In Star Trek, bigger is always stronger, at least in terms of shields it seems.
It just doesn't make sense.
The only reasonable explanation is that the saucer gives it stronger shields. In Star Trek, bigger is always stronger, at least in terms of shields it seems.
But again, that's abandoning the original intent. The idea was that the ship was mainly a scientific research platform, that the saucer was dedicated to peacetime functions and the secondary hull was specifically designed to go into combat alone. It's illogical to say that the way to make a destroyer more protected in battle is to stick a research institute on top of it.
This is my problem with keeping the saucer on in combat. It's abandoning what Gene Roddenberry and Andrew Probert intended when they created the Galaxy-class design. It's something that was done purely for the convenience of the filmmakers, and any attempt to rationalize it is a retcon that requires ignoring the original design intentions.
After all, if the battle hull was intentionally designed to go into combat without the saucer, and if the saucer was intentionally designed to be left out of any combat situations, why in the world would the ship accidentally end up being more combat-capable with the saucer attached? How the hell could that possibly happen, when according to the TNG Tech Manual they spent over two decades refining this design? It just doesn't make sense.
The only reason I could see for saucer-sep (aside from noncombat evac of the ship, combat separation with impulse only saucer always seemed short-sighted to me) would be colonization.
Load the saucer up with colonist. Warp out to a new colony world, go a control landing of the saucer, then use the saucer at the base of operations of the new colony; even planetary evac (assuming it could still lift off) if the fecal matter hit the fan. Battle-section stays around for system protection till a regularly assigned ship warps in; then the battle-section warps back for a new load of colonists.
The saucer in Generations was damaged in battle and forced by circumstances into the atmosphere, so that wasn't the emergency grounding written of in the TNG tech manual. A specially designed saucer, combined with a surveyed and prepared landing site, maybe even a water landing, would be able to land safely and take off again.
How many Galaxy-class ships did we see in the Dominion war? Maybe the ones that were there (the Galaxy and the Venture are the only ones I remember) were all built before the war. In which case they would of course have their saucers.
The manual does state that an emergency ditching like that would result in the saucer being wrecked beyond recovery... I like the concept of a water landing for sure. I think there was a numbered novel where this happened.
Yeah. Rouge Saucer.![]()
The manual does state that an emergency ditching like that would result in the saucer being wrecked beyond recovery... I like the concept of a water landing for sure. I think there was a numbered novel where this happened.
Yeah. Rouge Saucer.![]()
No, Rogue Saucer. Rouge means red.
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