More specifically, the separated saucer section. 

It doesn't matter how many tons it weights... it matters if it weighs more than the same volume in displaced water would weigh.Mark_Nguyen said:
The 'whole' Enterprise-d weighs five MILLION tons. For its volume, it would indeed sink and be sunk, as would most starships.
mark
StarryEyed said:
It would float like a cork unless it was made of extremely dense materials.
USS KG5 said:
StarryEyed said:
It would float like a cork unless it was made of extremely dense materials.
QFT - the saucer would float.
Mark_Nguyen said:
According to the last linked page, the Enterprise-D's volume is over 5.8 million cubic meters. If the TNG Tech Manual is correct, then the Enterprise weighs around five million metric tons. Since one cubic meter of water weighs around one metric ton, the volume of water the Enterprise would displace would weight more than the Enterprise itself. Therefore, the ship would float, albeit at an odd angle as the nacelles' weight would unbalance the ship. Also, the saucer alone would float, and probably upright.
Here's the basic "short form" about buoyancy... aka "will something float or not?"hutt359 said:...pretend for a moment that I don't know anything about metallurgy, engineering, or physics, and just tell me what the hell is going on. :thumbsup:
Actually, if you stop and think about it not from a "what if it were real" but rather a "what if I were designing it myself" perspective... it seems likely that the primary hull WOULD float in water (fresh or salt).ancient said:
I think it should float. It's probably less dense than water. The saucer certainly will. If the nacelles are made of some super-dense material, they might drag it down.
Seawater is much more dense than pure water, so if it landed in the ocean it would have a better chance.
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