YARN
Fleet Captain
Warning: Sacred Cow Meat in this Post
There is a sacred sort of nostalgia which seems to inform starship design.
There is (apparently) a felt need for there to be as much linear continuity as possibly between designs with a lot of emphasis on "intermediate forms." The Enterprise C, for example, was designed to be somewhere between the B and the D, as if the form were literally evolving into the D. From Wikipedia: The Ambassador-class NCC-1701-C was designed to show a gradual progression from the Excelsior to Galaxy classes. As a result, a few particular aspects of its design resemble both classes, and its size is intermediate between the two.
But this obsessive compulsion not only informs connecting missing letters of the Enterprise alphabet, but the letter in between as well. The Drex Files, for example, features this image
http://drexfiles.files.wordpress.com/2011/07/allegiance_class.jpg
which is somewhere between the D and the E.
The idea seems to be that if you played a film strip of these ships, we would see a perfectly smooth morphing from NX 1701-J. And this is a bad idea. Think about it.
We have canonical Enterprises spanning from the 22nd century to the 26th century.
Even in historical evolution, however, there are years of stability marked by a baffling flowering of forms.
A closer analogue is actual ship and plane design. The Enterprise sloop of 1775 and the aircraft carrier are very different ships. There are discontinuities in these ships' designs are marked by profound technological shifts. Going from propulsion by sail to nuclear power results in a very different looking ship - this is on the level of "does ship X have warp nacelles or not."
The shift from recon balloons prop to recon prop planes to the SR-71 is another big shift.
There is nothing wrong with keeping an eye out for continuity -- although one wonder why Starfleet insists on this configuration when on-screen evidence has established that ships may come in almost any shape one pleases (true of Starfleet variants and of the ships of other races).
Moral of the story: "Realistic" starfleet ship design should have just as much of an eye for discontinuity (breaking with tradition) as it does for nacelles, saucers, and blue deflector dishes.
There is a sacred sort of nostalgia which seems to inform starship design.
There is (apparently) a felt need for there to be as much linear continuity as possibly between designs with a lot of emphasis on "intermediate forms." The Enterprise C, for example, was designed to be somewhere between the B and the D, as if the form were literally evolving into the D. From Wikipedia: The Ambassador-class NCC-1701-C was designed to show a gradual progression from the Excelsior to Galaxy classes. As a result, a few particular aspects of its design resemble both classes, and its size is intermediate between the two.
But this obsessive compulsion not only informs connecting missing letters of the Enterprise alphabet, but the letter in between as well. The Drex Files, for example, features this image
http://drexfiles.files.wordpress.com/2011/07/allegiance_class.jpg
which is somewhere between the D and the E.
The idea seems to be that if you played a film strip of these ships, we would see a perfectly smooth morphing from NX 1701-J. And this is a bad idea. Think about it.
We have canonical Enterprises spanning from the 22nd century to the 26th century.
Even in historical evolution, however, there are years of stability marked by a baffling flowering of forms.
A closer analogue is actual ship and plane design. The Enterprise sloop of 1775 and the aircraft carrier are very different ships. There are discontinuities in these ships' designs are marked by profound technological shifts. Going from propulsion by sail to nuclear power results in a very different looking ship - this is on the level of "does ship X have warp nacelles or not."
The shift from recon balloons prop to recon prop planes to the SR-71 is another big shift.
There is nothing wrong with keeping an eye out for continuity -- although one wonder why Starfleet insists on this configuration when on-screen evidence has established that ships may come in almost any shape one pleases (true of Starfleet variants and of the ships of other races).
Moral of the story: "Realistic" starfleet ship design should have just as much of an eye for discontinuity (breaking with tradition) as it does for nacelles, saucers, and blue deflector dishes.
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