Judging from what we saw in Ent "Regeneration" with the Arctic Transport getting cubified on the rear end, I'd say thats a strong case for "growing" ships.
One thing I am curious about- the Borg cubes are all the same size. If they constantly assimilated other craft you would think the older vessels would be larger.
Also- why a perfect cube shape? If you were adding things all the time the exterior should not be that flat and all surfaces equal.
"We are the Borg- Oh crap, we just assimilated Species 227564 and our ship is now a rectangle- we need to find four more alien races to make it even again"...
I think Borg both assimilate other vessels in the field as well as build their own at various facilities within their domain. Both methods probably involve a central structure serving as the control node surrounded by layers of salvaged and repurposed parts.
In TNG when the Borg are first introduced, and they show the Borg Cube "repairing" itself, it definitely gave the impression of a "healing process," akin to something being "grown." There were no borg bodies floating around, welding, or replacing parts. Pipes just stretched out and reconnected, the edges of holes closed on their own, and so on. It was a neat idea, but so strange and awkward in its execution, I didn't really buy it ...
They also mentioned in VOY: "Dark Frontier" that a sphere damanged by an ion storm was "regenerating". I assume from these descriptions that the Borg use industrial replicators to repair/build their hulls.In TNG when the Borg are first introduced, and they show the Borg Cube "repairing" itself, it definitely gave the impression of a "healing process," akin to something being "grown." There were no borg bodies floating around, welding, or replacing parts. Pipes just stretched out and reconnected, the edges of holes closed on their own, and so on. It was a neat idea, but so strange and awkward in its execution, I didn't really buy it ...
Some adversaries might have the capacity to hit targets at any coordinates without going through the intervening coordinates first - say, a transporter could potentially strike at any depth, and the core wouldn't be safer than the surface. Hiding key components in unlikely places and constantly shifting the activity between a set of a dozen alternate components would then be the way to go.However, it does make sense that the most important ship components would be farthest from where energy fire or other weapons could hit.
I see alien ships as being assimilated on an ad hoc basis; some designs would be incorporated, some not.
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