I have a set of the Avenger class starship blueprints and I'd like to know what is different between the 2 classes?
I've always hated the name Miranda for a starship. I've been crossing my fingers hoping someday some incarnation of 'Star Trek' canonizes another name. I seem to recall those ships were only ever referred to as 'Miranda' in background info and a few blurry dedication plaques.
Looking at the canon and fandom registries for the things, I have always liked to think that the gap between the continuous registries for fandom Constitutions (NCC-1832 is the highest Tikopai variant, NCC-1843 is the lowest Enterprise II variant) is where the Miranda class exists, with the canonical NCC-1837 being one of the original ten vessels of that class.On a purely personal level, I like the idea that they're essentially very close cousins with little specific differences except for a bit of hardware and mission profile.
I believe there are two distinct sets of blueprints for the two classes from the very creators of your set, which I presume to be Mike Rupprecht and Alex Rosenzweig, right? I don't have the Miranda light cruiser set, though, so I can only speculate that it portrays a more TNG-style interior to create contrast with the TOS movie era innards of the Avenger heavy frigate.Are the specifications for the 2 ships the same?
Why? Lexington sounds way sillier - a village with lots of lexers living in it? Or Saratoga - a fusion of classic Indian and Greek clothing floating in space? And what's with this Enterprise - are her sister ships supposed to be Business, Scheme and Attempt?I've always hated the name Miranda for a starship.
Why? Lexington sounds way sillier - a village with lots of lexers living in it? Or Saratoga - a fusion of classic Indian and Greek clothing floating in space? And what's with this Enterprise - are her sister ships supposed to be Business, Scheme and Attempt?
I seem to recall those ships were only ever referred to as 'Miranda' in background info and a few blurry dedication plaques.
If I recall correctly? Star Trek Communicator or Star Trek Magazine did a oracle about this in the late nineties or early 2000s. They said that there were two models. One was the Avenger and the other was the Reliant. The Avenger itself was a upside down version of a Miranda class. But I can't remember what they said happen to the Avenger. But I'm assuming that they said that they turn the Avenger over and relabel it as the Reliant and took the Reliant model and relabel it as the Saratoga.
Well you're probably right. It been 10 years or more since I've read either magazine and I don't have either of them any more to tell if I'm right or not. Oh yeah, it wasn't Star Trek Magazine I had, it was Star Trek The Magazine.I seem to recall those ships were only ever referred to as 'Miranda' in background info and a few blurry dedication plaques.
That's correct. The name "Miranda" (and "Oberth" for that matter) was never uttered by a single person in all of broadcast Trek. The name was created for the U.S.S. Brattain's dedication plaque in TNG's "Night Terrors."
(Although in early TNG there seemed to be a disconnect between the art department and the visual effects people...i.e. Okuda made the plaque thinking that the "Miranda" class was going to be a different type of ship than the re-use of the Reliant from STII. But because there was no budget to build a new model, the VFX guys just randomly relabeled the Reliant model; hence the "Miranda Class" now referred to that type of ship. I'm sure Okuda can correct me if my assumption is wrong....)
If I recall correctly? Star Trek Communicator or Star Trek Magazine did a oracle about this in the late nineties or early 2000s. They said that there were two models. One was the Avenger and the other was the Reliant. The Avenger itself was a upside down version of a Miranda class. But I can't remember what they said happen to the Avenger. But I'm assuming that they said that they turn the Avenger over and relabel it as the Reliant and took the Reliant model and relabel it as the Saratoga.
You are not recalling it correctly. Harve Bennett was given diagrams of the Reliant before construction began on the model. These diagrams showed the ship with nacelles on top. Somehow between his approval and the finished product, the model was build with the nacelles underneath instead. There was no "Avenger" model built.
You are not recalling it correctly. Harve Bennett was given diagrams of the Reliant before construction began on the model. These diagrams showed the ship with nacelles on top. Somehow between his approval and the finished product, the model was build with the nacelles underneath instead. There was no "Avenger" model built.
You are not recalling it correctly. Harve Bennett was given diagrams of the Reliant before construction began on the model. These diagrams showed the ship with nacelles on top. Somehow between his approval and the finished product, the model was build with the nacelles underneath instead. There was no "Avenger" model built.
Sort of. The version I've heard is that when Harve received the concept sketch of the Reliant, he opened them upside down (so that the nacelles, which were indeed dorsal or top mounted) were on the bottom, and that stuck. Personally I think it looks good that way, though it's hard to say how the alternative would look.
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