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Achernar subclass: What Is It?

Emperor Norton

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The Achernar subclass/class is something found in the expanded universe of Star Trek. It evolved out of the attempt to explain a kagillion Constitution classes in existence outside "Only 12 like it"; I'm not sure about anything prior to the Technical Manual, but said publication explained it by have the Constitution class really be the prefit/Pike era ship, and the TOS refit being the Bonhomme Richards subclass; Franz Joseph invented the concept of subclasses. So therefore you could cheat and say there were 12 Constitution class ships, but multiple more that were of the new design subclass and were never refit.

The Achernar class presents a problem because there seems to be absolutely no reason for it to even have been created. I can't find anything extensive about it anywhere, so it's not anything special. It doesn't seem to have been any fan or writer's pet project or anything. And all it looks like is an incorrectly drawn Constitution class taken too far as a concept. It seems like a vestigial organ. Or maybe it never had any purpose.

So could anyone chime in on this? On the whole, what this was supposed to be and why it exists confuses me.
 
The Achernar subclass was essentially 'born' two years prior to the Technical Manual, when Franz Joseph published the original Star Trek Blueprints in 1973 (seen here). When he was called out on the visual inaccuracies of his 'Enterprise' exterior in various ST conventions, he claimed not to have Matt Jefferies' plans to work from, and was eyeballing it from blowups of individual frames from episodes. (He also said he was more interested in fleshing out the ship's design than in getting the outside exactly right.)

So when the Technical Manual opportunity came around a couple of years later, Joseph came up with the Achernar subclass idea to fit his design into canon as a 'Year Four' configuration for the Enterprise (hence shutting the more rabid fanboys up). The Enterprise in TAS (airing in the couple of years prior) looked just different enough from its' live-action counterpart that Joseph could say his design was that version of the ship.

As for the kagillion numbers of that subclass, well, you can't really run a good galaxy-spanning Federation vs. Klingon/Romulan RPG battle on only twelve ships, can you?
 
Just say it's another class of Heavy Cruiser. You don't need "sub classes". It's normal to have multiple classes of a single type. If I recall from that Star Trek Tech Manual, there aren't really that many, especially considering the colossal size and resources of the Federation. The US Navy in '45 had over 70 cruisers and about 100 Carriers.
 
In the common line based in Franz Joseph's work, it is a later cruiser based on the Constitution-class designs. "Ships of the Starfleet" has several of the older ships updated to this configurations just prior to USS Enterprise going in for her major refit.

FASA took a different approach. The Achernar-class (as well as the Tikopai-class) is said to be a class of cruisers that operated during the Four Years War, and was as far as we know, not based on the Constitution-class. They were scrapped or converted to other classes in an effort to reduce the over abundance of combat ships following the war. FASA never had stats or images of these ships. One site suggested they were converted transport tugs similar to the Franz Joseph based Ptolemy-class fitted with integrated combat pods so they could build a large number of them (68 Achernar and 44 Tikopai).
 
The Achernar subclass/class is something found in the expanded universe of Star Trek. It evolved out of the attempt to explain a kagillion Constitution classes in existence outside "Only 12 like it"; I'm not sure about anything prior to the Technical Manual, but said publication explained it by have the Constitution class really be the prefit/Pike era ship, and the TOS refit being the Bonhomme Richards subclass; Franz Joseph invented the concept of subclasses. So therefore you could cheat and say there were 12 Constitution class ships, but multiple more that were of the new design subclass and were never refit.

The Achernar class presents a problem because there seems to be absolutely no reason for it to even have been created. I can't find anything extensive about it anywhere, so it's not anything special. It doesn't seem to have been any fan or writer's pet project or anything. And all it looks like is an incorrectly drawn Constitution class taken too far as a concept. It seems like a vestigial organ. Or maybe it never had any purpose.

So could anyone chime in on this? On the whole, what this was supposed to be and why it exists confuses me.
Somehow, James Dixon decided that the Archernar-class was the USS Enterprise as depicted in Franz Joseph's USS Constitution Class Booklet of General Plans/Enterprise Blueprints, despite them very explicitly saying "Constitution-class". He wrote a deck-by-deck comparison in a text file called "Archernar vs. Bonhomme Richard class" (he'd decided that the Enterprise as seen throughout TAS was the former, and TOS the latter). Links HERE.
 
Must not have bothered Jefferies that much. The thicker, curvier secondary hull of his Phase II Enterprise was modeled directly on Joseph's.
 
Wasn't it the other way around? All of MJ's Enterprise sketches show the curveyer secondary hull, which presumably was FJ based his deck plans on. However, from a modellers POV straighter lines would definitely have been preferred.
 
Gah, all the fanwanking...

I personally don't like the idea of sub-classes and all that. It was clearly intended that there were 12 Constitution class ships; we can cheat and make it 13, but it was flat out stated and intended to be what it was. Fans and expanded universe sources constantly try to fudge that number and make it something greater. The fact is they probably should not have said "only 12 like it" or whatever it was in the episode "Tomorrow Is Yesterday". The people involved with the show themselves even cheated that number by having a memo list of 14 ships, and constantly trying to shove more in (USS Essex and USS Eagle, for example). Despite the fact they shouldn't have said it, they did say it, and that's what is written in stone. It's a finite number, and isn't the sort of canon thing you can jiggle to make out to be something different (like the "United Earth" stuff).

That said, my interest personally is not anything in-universe, but simply as what it is in the real world and what the point was and all that.
 
Well there is also the unspoken "12 ships like it 'that are left'". It was "known" that at least two of the class had been destroyed already, even by the production staff when they reached that line. And then there was USS Defiant, which they hadn't counted on, since it was an even later episode.
 
Well there is also the unspoken "12 ships like it 'that are left'". It was "known" that at least two of the class had been destroyed already, even by the production staff when they reached that line. And then there was USS Defiant, which they hadn't counted on, since it was an even later episode.

The Constellation was destroyed after that episode, and the Valiant, though they counted it as a Constitution class (well, "Starship class") was lost way in the past hence it wouldn't have been a Constitution class, so that didn't make sense. So really, per that line, all the ships are accounted for and have yet to make a United Earth shattering kaboom.
 
It seems like they counted it when the production staff was making up names for the 12-13 starships in the fleet.

In addition to this, that class of Starship is over 20 years old, and if the loss rate during Kirk's Five Year mission is anything to go by, they've bound to have lost a few other ships in those 20 years. And that is without any war or combat with Klingons taken into account over those 20+ years.
 
Gah, all the fanwanking...

I personally don't like the idea of sub-classes and all that. It was clearly intended that there were 12 Constitution class ships;

Really becuase the line about 12 ships being like the Enterprise seems kind of ambiguous.

Does it mean only 13 ships total in the Constitution-class, or 12 other ships outfitted for multipurpose missions like the Enterprise was?
 
And does it mean, only 12 like it ever? or only 12 in service now? Because they could be building replacements and keep 12 in service at any time but there would be more individual ships in total over the life of the class?


BTW, is this the one with the engines and saucer on backwards? I can't remember where I saw it, but they had a whole bunch of different designs which were basically 3 tubes and a saucer attached in different ways.
 
That "twelve like it in the fleet" line, if memory serves came from "Tomorrow is Yesterday", which also made the reference to UESPA. My personal theory is that "twelve" was a reference to ships in the Earth fleet. Later, the Enterprise was assigned to the Federation fleet, much as an army unit today might get reassigned under United Nations command.
 
BTW, is this the one with the engines and saucer on backwards? I can't remember where I saw it, but they had a whole bunch of different designs which were basically 3 tubes and a saucer attached in different ways.

Better to show you than try to describe it:

heavycruiser_constitution.jpg


The original Constitution-class, as it looked in Pike's (and probably April's) time.

heavycruiser_bonhommerichrd.jpg


The Bonhomme Richard subclass, aka the Enterprise as we knew her during the three years of TOS.

heavycruiser_achernar.jpg


The Achernar subclass - the Constitution class as redesigned by Franz Joseph. More grid lines, more rounded bridge, thicker and curvier engineering hull.
 
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