Re: At what point does the Federation decide to stop building Enterpri
I think that there may have been a "true" registry number for all these successor ships, at least in the design stage, before some admiral poked his head in and decided they needed a new Enterprise.
After the Naval Construction Contract is up, the registry can be anything, and is merely used for display purposes on the hull and identification purposes in status reports and whatnot.
So let's say in 2286, they decided to rename the Yorktown after the destroyed Enterprise. Furthermore, perhaps at Kirk or Scott's request, they agreed to change the decorative registry number. "NCC-1701" may have been too confusing, or unfeasible with official reports tied to the old ship, so they appended an "-A" to the old registry and treated it like a big deal.
Then a few years later, when the Ent-A is about retired, someone decides that one of the new Excelsiors will be re-registered and named in honor of Captain Kirk and the Enterprise. This continues decades later when the new Ambassadors need some press attention. And then the Galaxys. And the second Sovereign class is renamed and registered due to Picard and/or Riker's insistence.
Within Starfleet in the 2380s, this is a non-issue. No one expects or cares what happens when they reach 27 ships. By the time they do, registries and ship names will probably no longer be prominently displayed and registries might not even be known outside of the planning stages (maybe when they reach 6 or 7 digits).
This might also apply to the Defiant or Yamato or Relativity. Whoever gets closest to the Z mark. If they don't completely ignore it at some point, perhaps the registry number (or even name, for a time) might be retired as a great honor instead of reused in perpetuity.
I think that there may have been a "true" registry number for all these successor ships, at least in the design stage, before some admiral poked his head in and decided they needed a new Enterprise.
After the Naval Construction Contract is up, the registry can be anything, and is merely used for display purposes on the hull and identification purposes in status reports and whatnot.
So let's say in 2286, they decided to rename the Yorktown after the destroyed Enterprise. Furthermore, perhaps at Kirk or Scott's request, they agreed to change the decorative registry number. "NCC-1701" may have been too confusing, or unfeasible with official reports tied to the old ship, so they appended an "-A" to the old registry and treated it like a big deal.
Then a few years later, when the Ent-A is about retired, someone decides that one of the new Excelsiors will be re-registered and named in honor of Captain Kirk and the Enterprise. This continues decades later when the new Ambassadors need some press attention. And then the Galaxys. And the second Sovereign class is renamed and registered due to Picard and/or Riker's insistence.
Within Starfleet in the 2380s, this is a non-issue. No one expects or cares what happens when they reach 27 ships. By the time they do, registries and ship names will probably no longer be prominently displayed and registries might not even be known outside of the planning stages (maybe when they reach 6 or 7 digits).
This might also apply to the Defiant or Yamato or Relativity. Whoever gets closest to the Z mark. If they don't completely ignore it at some point, perhaps the registry number (or even name, for a time) might be retired as a great honor instead of reused in perpetuity.