In relation to TNG when was this class retired?
Or then starships are never really retired, as much as they are operated until they fall apart.
A starship never really gets outdated: even if Klingon or Romulan technology moves ahead, Starfleet can always find another adversary from the Milky Way whose tech is inferior and will stay inferior for the next century. It might thus make sense to keep operating Constitutions in certain theaters until the last one rusts out - but new ones would not be built, so the numbers would dwindle, and those numbers that did remain would stay off the cameras because nobody is interested in adventures involving vastly inferior villains!
Timo Saloniemi
For all we know, there may have been a few Constitution-class ships still in service as late as TNG's third season, IMO. Just because there weren't any seen around the Enterprise-D doesn't mean that there couldn't have been some still in service elsewhere in the Federation--heck, one might even have been blasted apart at Wolf 359...
Or then starships are never really retired, as much as they are operated until they fall apart.
A starship never really gets outdated: even if Klingon or Romulan technology moves ahead, Starfleet can always find another adversary from the Milky Way whose tech is inferior and will stay inferior for the next century. It might thus make sense to keep operating Constitutions in certain theaters until the last one rusts out - but new ones would not be built, so the numbers would dwindle, and those numbers that did remain would stay off the cameras because nobody is interested in adventures involving vastly inferior villains!
Timo Saloniemi
Interesting but I doubt it would be like this.
I personally just assumed they were all retired around the time of TUC. That's just my personal theory.
As far as canon goes, Picard says there's a Constitution in the fleet museum in Relics, therefore implying the class was retired prior to that episode.
Starfleet has a really weird track record with how long starships stay in service. For example, the Ambassador class is newer than the Excelsior class, but we haven't seen an Ambassador since TNG's 5th season, while we continued to see Excelsiors up to Voyager's final season.
maybeor maybe they filled different rolls than the constitution class? I think they are just cruisers, not heavy cruisers like the Constitutions and Excelsior.^^^Mirandas could have been (or is it will be?) a lot cheaper to manufacture and maintain, so therefore a LOT more of them than Connies.
To a degree, yes the real world does work that way, military ships are refitted, altered and reassigned to new roles, until they're useless and played out. Then we sell them to our allies.It doesn't work in the real world.
Built for WWII, some stayed in service through early 1975 . Just as the USS Enterprise of the Constitution class was refitted as the Enterprise class, the Essex class USS Hancock was refitted as the one of the five ship Hancock class.The USA could have kept Essex class carriers around ...
Might want to sight a different example there too, the battleship Missouri had a life span of nearly 48 years... and what the hell, maybe a couple battleships, too.
Iraq maybe, during Operation Desert Storm, the battleship Missouri fired 28 cruise missiles into Iraqi targets, plus shore targets with her main guns..Surely they were capable of defeating some country, somewhere.
I agree. The idea is possible but unlikely. It doesn't work in the real world.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.