• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Constitution Class Starships under Conmstruction in Trek 11

Re: Constitution Class Starships under Conmstruction in Trek

Kelso said:
Forgive me if this was mentioned and I missed it...

'Constitution Class' from Scotty's technical journal (seen in Tribbles & possibly Space Seed)

close-up

Memory Alpha

Trekplace (scroll down)
Interesting. I'd forgotten about this. Still, I think it is easy to call the NCC-1701 Starship Class and everything later Constitution Class.

Which is where I get off on this argument. To not call the NCC-1701 Starship Class is the height of fan arrogance. It said Starship Class on the wall of the set, for criminy. I don't care if you couldn't read it because of the shitty video. It will be very interesting to see if you can read the dedication plaque on the high def release. If you can, does that now make it canon?

As for the two different classes, isn't this when Scotty says he's going to get caught up with his technical journals? I bet he's reading about this proposed new upgrade of his ship, the Constitution Class. I can't believe Engineer Scott wouldn't know every last spec and detail about his primary phasers already. He wouldn't need to read up on that. But about improvements to his ship? That he'd want to read about.
 
Re: Constitution Class Starships under Conmstruction in Trek

Which is where I get off on this argument. To not call the NCC-1701 Starship Class is the height of fan arrogance. It said Starship Class on the wall of the set, for criminy. I don't care if you couldn't read it because of the shitty video.
Okay, fair enough... but how do we reconcile that with the equally canon "Relics" from TNG where, on a holodeck recreation of the exact same ship, Picard refers to it as Constitution class and Scotty agrees?
 
Re: Constitution Class Starships under Conmstruction in Trek

I reconcile them through a famous Emerson quote:

A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds.

Let's be big minded, shall we, CoveTom? :)


OK, you want a fanwank reason? Picard made a mistake, easy with the evolution of the ship. Scotty, on the other hand, was a little drunk and had read Emerson. He went for being polite and earning a drinking buddy. I know, it's a sucky reason but no worse than the various explanations of why Spock was laughing and yelling in The Cage.

AndorianHappy.gif
 
Re: Constitution Class Starships under Conmstruction in Trek

Outpost4 said:
I reconcile them through a famous Emerson quote:

A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds.

Let's be big minded, shall we, CoveTom? :)


OK, you want a fanwank reason? Picard made a mistake, easy with the evolution of the ship. Scotty, on the other hand, was a little drunk and had read Emerson. He went for being polite and earning a drinking buddy. I know, it's a sucky reason but no worse than the various explanations of why Spock was laughing and yelling in The Cage.

AndorianHappy.gif




Ok, you're not going to like me saying this Outpost, but nevertheless:

If we were to assume that actual Starfleet designers were to have constructed the Enterprise 1701 as a "Starship Class," then this would (under existing conventions) mean that the lead -aka prototype- vessel of this class was itself called Starship. Logical, yes?

Let me therefore lead you on to the following points: It is a starship. We're all (including the designers) fully aware of this fact. On top of this, the ship would have had the "USS" prefix before the name; which as we all know stands for "United (Federation of Planets) StarShip"

As a result, we have Captain Abraham Non taking his brand-spanking-new ship out to meet a previously undiscovered bunch of forehead-of-the-week aliens. How does he introduce himself? Well, as follows:

"This is Captain Abraham Non, of the Federation Starship .. Starship. We come in peace, but shoot to kill...."

I'm fairly sure you can see how silly that looks and sounds, neh? ;)
 
Re: Constitution Class Starships under Conmstruction in Trek

Outpost4 said:To not call the NCC-1701 Starship Class is the height of fan arrogance. It said Starship Class on the wall of the set, for criminy. I don't care if you couldn't read it because of the shitty video. It will be very interesting to see if you can read the dedication plaque on the high def release. If you can, does that now make it canon?
If you start using inflammatory terms to describe opposing viewpoints, you're opening yourself up for just the same in response, you know that, don'cha?

The question, ultimately, comes down to INTENT. Errors can appear, discontinuities can appear. But if the guys producing the show intended it to be "Constitution Class" (which I believe was referred to in "The Making of Star Trek" among other places, LONG before any of this was ever an issue), well... that's what we ought to go with, even if the "on the set" details might have said something different in one spot or another.

The plaque was NEVER visible on-screen in the original INTENDED resolution. The Tech graphic shown above was also not visible.

But at SOME point during the making of the series the guys making the show decided that it was a Constitution-class ship. This wasn't something that Franz Joseph came up with in '74.

If you're going to quibble over the nameplate (rather than trying to figure out how to make it fit with everything else)... are you also going to claim that the deck schematic shown opposite that nameplate was truly representative of the shape of the ship and of its internal structure?

Honestly, "the height of fan arrogance" is when one fan starts calling other fans... OF THIS ENTIRELY FICTIONAL PIECE OF ENTERTAINMENT MEDIA... names because they don't agree with his take on the fiction.

It's OK to have your own point of view... none of this is real. It's OK to disagree. But it's just unbearably stupid and obnoxious to start name-calling towards those who don't agree with your take. :rolleyes: What you REALLY mean to say is "It's the height of arrogance not to agree with me." Which, in itself, is pretty damned arrogant.
 
Re: Constitution Class Starships under Conmstruction in Trek

yenny said:
The meaning between a Starship and a spaceship.

Starship: A spacecraft either man or unman. That travel faster then the speed of light.

Spaceship: A spacecraft either man or unman. That is limit to the speed below the speed of light.

Not in the TREK universe.

As mentioned above, in "Bread and Circuses" a ship that had previously visited that Earth-type planet was NOT a starship, yet it obviously had warp drive, being able to travel between star systems in a reasonable amount of time.

Being able to go FTL or not is NOT the determining factor on what makes for a "starship".
 
Re: Constitution Class Starships under Conmstruction in Trek

Criminy is an inflamatory term?
Height of fan arrogance is an inflamatory term?

On the other hand, I don't think you are unbearably stupid and obnoxious, Cary L. Brown. I regret that you feel this way about me. I had no idea you'd take this personally. That was never my intention. If you were offended by my remarks, I am sorry and I apologize.

I make a couple posts on this topic. In one paragraph I show passion. That I will not apologize for. You want me to stop being a Trekkie on TrekBBS? No way!

Beyond that, yes, I think fans that pick and choose which parts of Trek they want to accept are arrogant. The concept of a personal canon excapes me. It's either canon or not. And I think that trying to ignore a big sign on the main set of the show, readable or not using 1966 video technology, pushes the envelope to the limit.

All of my remaining words in this thread, outside of that paragraph, are trying to reconcile the dedication plaque. Maybe I would have been wiser to just stick with Emerson.

Blip, you make a well reasoned and thought out argument. I hadn't considered that before. There really is no solution to this problem. It's a continuity glitch. We can all try to balance our various viewpoints on the head of a pin and watch as the other guy successfully knocks them off.

Hell, the plaque is pretty cheesy. GR probably said, "Make it say Starship Class, San Francisco," in the middle of a three martini lunch and a quickie with Majel. That would explain a lot.
 
Re: Constitution Class Starships under Conmstruction in Trek

Outpost4 said:Criminy is an inflammatory term?
Not in the least.
Height of fan arrogance is an inflammatory term?
Absolutely, when you're using it to refer to a simple different point of view.
On the other hand, I don't think you are unbearably stupid and obnoxious, Cary L. Brown. I regret that you feel this way about me.
I don't. I really don't. This is something that people get wrong so often. The ATTITUDE being expressed is. That doesn't mean YOU are. By pointing this out, one would hope you'd realize that referring to an opposing viewpoint in that way, as an ACTION, is extremely obnoxious, and (if you're not that sort of person yourself) that you'd step back and rethink it a bit.

People who are inherently that way are not worth pointing things out to. But people FREQUENTLY fail to see their own actions in the same context that others do (and yes, that includes ME). So, sometimes (if you don't think the person REALIZES how their actions come across) it's worthwhile to point it out. If the person doing the bad thing isn't a bad person, but rather simply doesn't see it as others do, then pointing out how others see it might result in a change... if the person is a decent sort up-front.

Make sense?
I had no idea you'd take this personally. That was never my intention. If you were offended by my remarks, I am sorry and I apologize.
Not offended in any way. I merely wanted to point out that it's REALLY BAD DISCUSSION FORM (and yes, to refer to those whose opinions differ from your own, in an area where there is clear and unmistakable ambiguity, as being "the height of fan arrogance"... well, it's definitely very bad debating form).
I make a couple posts on this topic. In one paragraph I show passion. That I will not apologize for. You want me to stop being a Trekkie on TrekBBS? No way!
Again, not in the least. I just want for you to realize that, since this is NOT a clear-cut thing, and since it is NOT in any way reality based, and since the other side has a pretty strong argument (just as you see yourself as having a strong argument) it's just WRONG to start throwing around terms like "the height of fan arrogance" to describe that opposing viewpoint.

Passion is good... I've been known to show a bit of that myself, by the way... ;) ... but honestly, what you did was (as it seemed from my perspective and from that of a few others, it seems) basically saying "well, you disagree with me and so that's arrogance, so just shut up." The use of that term, "fan arrogance," really comes across that way. In a sense, when someone drops to that level in a debate, they're admitting that they can't argue on the facts and are resorting to the last tool of desperation in debate... unsupported emotion.

I'm not saying you shouldn't be passionate. I'm just saying that what you did was the debating equivalent of saying "well, you're ugly and you suck, now shut up." Once you do that, you've really undercut yourself. Something worth thinking about in the future. (And yes, on a few occasions I've done the same myself... not claiming otherwise... we're all better at seeing screw ups with others than we are at seeing it with ourselves!)
Beyond that, yes, I think fans that pick and choose which parts of Trek they want to accept are arrogant. The concept of a personal canon excapes me. It's either canon or not. And I think that trying to ignore a big sign on the main set of the show, readable or not using 1966 video technology, pushes the envelope to the limit.
But the VERY SAME ARGUMENT you're making can then be applied to the "technical journal" page. Furthermore, there's the VERY PERTINENT argument about INTENT... that is, what did the people making the show INTEND it to be (which is recorded as being "Constitution class" from original production documents from the 1960s series).

And, of course, we also have about forty years of established post-TOS materials, all of which have been entirely consistent on this being "Constitution-class." Books, movies, sequel TV series... EVERYTHING... is consistent.

THE ONLY PLACE "STARSHIP CLASS" WAS EVER REFERRED TO IS ON THAT PLAQUE. It was never used ANYPLACE else. Was it?

My point? You, also, are "picking and choosing" what you're accepting and what you're not accepting. You choose to put the bridge plaque at a higher level than the other bits of information.

By your own argument... by rejecting all that other material, in favor of the one bit you DO like (where most people reject that one bit in favor of all the other bits)... you're engaging in "the height of fan arrogance" too.

Get it?
All of my remaining words in this thread, outside of that paragraph, are trying to reconcile the dedication plaque.
And that's a good thing. :)
Hell, the plaque is pretty cheesy. GR probably said, "Make it say Starship Class" in the middle of a three martini lunch and a quickie with Majel. That would explain a lot.
:guffaw: Oh, yeah. More likely, though... someone with a real naval background was given the task of making the plate, and asked (in an off-the-cuff fashion), "what sort of ship is the Enterprise?" to someone on the production staff, and the off-the-cuff answer was "it's a STARSHIP." The plate-maker, being a former navy guy, meant to ask "what CLASS of ship" but misspoke, and the production guy was probably thinking "does this guy mean is it a sailing ship, or a WWII battleship, or what?"

Since the show was always on a shoestring budget, and since the plate was never readable on-screen, nobody would ever have bothered to fix such a little snafu.

It's pretty clearly defined in Whitfield's book (all about the original production of TOS) that the ship was intended to be Constitution class, at the time of production. F.J. wasn't the first guy to pick up on that and run with it, but he did make it so well-known that it became an absolutely unassailable (if arguably "fanon") fact that the Enterprise was Constitution class. This was established on-screen during TNG and later as being the case. The refit was never referred to as "Constitution class" until ST-VI, and then it was on a remarkably cheesy print which served no real purpose (why would Scotty need a rough EXTERIOR line drawing of HIS SHIP in order figure out where to search?)

In that whole "pick and choose" bit, I place that print in the same category as the "turboshaft deck markings in ST-V" category... a production mistake due to sloppiness.

But that's just my opinion. Others are free to have their own... we ALL have to "pick and choose" because the continuity is a bit messed up there, with differing, inconsistent "facts" that we have to either choose between or try, through some weird logical gymnastics, to reconcile.

The best I've seen is that the internal differences between the 1701(r) in ST-I/ST-II/ST-III and in ST-V/ST-VI are the differences between "Enterprise class" and "Constitution-class-third-refit" (First being the TOS refit, second being the non-cannonical "Ships of the Starfleet" version, and this being the third, exceeding the Enterprise class specs in a number of areas and thus being a new class.)

It's all in fun... no "fan arrogance" about ANY of this. Keep that in mind and we'll all get along just fine. ;)
 
Re: Constitution Class Starships under Conmstruction in Trek

I don't recall what the plaque itself was supposed to look like, but (and get ready for a potentially giant can of worms here folks!) is it possible that it could have been meant to read: Starship Class: San Francisco? ie, someone randomly decided the ship was of San Francisco class?

:devil:
 
Re: Constitution Class Starships under Conmstruction in Trek

Nice try...but no. :D

It says:

U.S.S. ENTERPRISE
STARSHIP CLASS
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF.


So what, we're paying the engravers by the letter? Can't we afford to spell out California? :p

BTW, Blip, I did some research. The USS Starship was crewed by Duran Duran. It was considered the worst posting in all of Starfleet, probably because of Captain Jar Jar Binks. Always singing Louie, Louie... :rolleyes:
 
Re: Constitution Class Starships under Conmstruction in Trek

gastrof said:
yenny said:
The meaning between a Starship and a spaceship.

Starship: A spacecraft either man or unman. That travel faster then the speed of light.

Spaceship: A spacecraft either man or unman. That is limit to the speed below the speed of light.

Not in the TREK universe.

As mentioned above, in "Bread and Circuses" a ship that had previously visited that Earth-type planet was NOT a starship, yet it obviously had warp drive, being able to travel between star systems in a reasonable amount of time.

Being able to go FTL or not is NOT the determining factor on what makes for a "starship".

In Trek. He just don't command a ship. He command a battleship.

What I'm trying to said, is that all spacecraft with it own FTL drive were listed as starship.
But spacecraft that didn't have it own FLT drive. But use assisted FLT. drive were call spaceship.

The SS.Beagle is kind of like the shuttle that brought Spock to the Enterprise on STTMP and like the FTL. drive that Ben spaceship connected to in star wars clones wars. Well the Beagle is more like Ben spaceship.
 
Re: Constitution Class Starships under Conmstruction in Trek

I'd like to point out, Outpost4 and Cary L. Brown, that once it was brought up that there was an issue with Outpost4's earlier post, the two of you have been able to discuss it and debate in a civilized and intelligent manner, without things escalating to personal attacks. And that says something very positive about the two of you, in light of some of the other exchanges I've seen on this board.
 
Re: Constitution Class Starships under Conmstruction in Trek

Outpost4 said:
Nice try...but no. :D

It says:

U.S.S. ENTERPRISE
STARSHIP CLASS
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF.

I don't see why this is such an issue....obviously by starship class, they meant it was a starship type ship(as indicated by G Roddenberry in "The Making of ST"), and didn't indicate what the NAME class of the ship was, which by every other evidence we see, was Constitution Class. Case solved.

RAMA
 
Re: Constitution Class Starships under Conmstruction in Trek

I don’t post with astounding frequency and as such am often ignored, but, if you will all be so kind as to extend me the courtesy of considering a real life parallel to this class designation issue.

I work in the world of submarines, specifically “Boomers”. When my cohorts and I discuss the variations among the current boats we refer to them by either hull number or ship name; however, when we discuss the class there are actually three different and distinct class names for the same boats.

These are: Ohio Class, Trident or “Trid” Class, and 726 Class.

Now, these designations can be applied in singular or combination to all of the boats currently serving deterrent roles in the Naval arsenal; however, not all of those apply to all of the boats anymore and one is a legacy designation that is understood but no longer official. With the conversion of the first four Ohio Class subs from SSBN designation to SSGN (a conversion of the main weapon system) “Trid” Class can no longer be universally applied. Now there is a breakdown in one must make reference to “726 BN” or “Ohio Class BNs” since the USS OHIO, SSBN 726 was the first converted over to the GN platform.

Now, depending on the structure of Starfleet and the various roles and responsibilities that the Enterprise and her sister ships had over the course of their service life, each one could have been defined by different class designations – even concurrently. The change driver could be technological in the form of weapons or propulsion, mission role related, or even political (this is often done when investment in a platform is contradictory to political treaties – change the identifying name of an item mentioned in the treaty and one can get away with keeping it).

Thanks for reading my post.
 
Re: Constitution Class Starships under Conmstruction in Trek

I'd like to point out something about all this "starship class" business. Folks get all tied in knots about it, as if there would need to be a "U.S.S. Starship" to make the classification make sense. But I'll remind you that there is a sensible way that ship could have been both "starship class" AND "Constitution class" (as it was per the visual evidence in the episodes.)

The British had "Town" class cruisers, and "River" class frigates, with no member of the class being called "H.M.S. River" or "Town". They had "Flower class" corvettes and sloops, with names like "Violet" and "Bluebell". There was never a "H.M.S. Flower" in the class. The first (by number) was Acanthus and I suppose the whole lot could have been called "Acanthus class" if the Royal navy was so inclined.

What is to say the Enterprise wasn't part of a class named for famous... starships? And that at some point the Fleet decided -- possibly when the naming convention was changed to include other things besides famous starships -- to call the class after its original member?
 
Re: Constitution Class Starships under Conmstruction in Trek

Cary L. Brown said:
I can't say with 100% certainty that Roddenberry and crew invented the term (SOMEONE may have used it before) but as far as I'm aware, nobody had ever used the term before.

The term was widely used in science fiction literature decades before "Star Trek." Like virtually everything else in the series, GR "borrowed" it.

Etymology Online, BTW, identifies the first use of the word in 1934 - in "Astounding Stories," of course. ;)
 
Re: Constitution Class Starships under Conmstruction in Trek

Cary L. Brown said:
Since then, however, and in almost pure response to Star Trek, the term "starship" has become used to describe ANY faster-than-light vessel capable of going from one solar system to another. And I think we're all pretty comfortable with that... it's a REAL word, now, not just a fictional one (though, as far as any of us know, nobody on Earth has a real, working starship... do they?)

3 of them:
Daedalus_class_battlecruiser_orbits_Atlantis.jpg



I mean, no... of course not. It's all just science fiction.

Honestly.
 
Re: Constitution Class Starships under Conmstruction in Trek

aridas sofia said:
I'd like to point out something about all this "starship class" business. Folks get all tied in knots about it, as if there would need to be a "U.S.S. Starship" to make the classification make sense. But I'll remind you that there is a sensible way that ship could have been both "starship class" AND "Constitution class" (as it was per the visual evidence in the episodes.)

The British had "Town" class cruisers, and "River" class frigates, with no member of the class being called "H.M.S. River" or "Town". They had "Flower class" corvettes and sloops, with names like "Violet" and "Bluebell". There was never a "H.M.S. Flower" in the class. The first (by number) was Acanthus and I suppose the whole lot could have been called "Acanthus class" if the Royal navy was so inclined.

What is to say the Enterprise wasn't part of a class named for famous... starships? And that at some point the Fleet decided -- possibly when the naming convention was changed to include other things besides famous starships -- to call the class after its original member?



We're British, why on earth would our naming conventions be expected to make any sense?
 
Re: Constitution Class Starships under Conmstruction in Trek

While I'm head over heels regarding the "named after starships" idea, it's not as if the "Town" or "County" class nomers ever actually made it into the dedication plaques of the respective RN ships...

Still, for those who want to reconcile every single bit of contradictory onscreen material (that'd be me), "named after starships" is probably the very best way to go. The alternate approach of "Starships with capital S are a special breed" is quite popular in many circles, but rather weakly supported on screen. Since every piece of onscreen material that by show-internal chronology predates the TOS events is likely to refer to the humblest Starfleet vessel as "starship" (ENT and some TOS and TNG episodes already did so, and the subject matter of this subforum will almost inevitably do the same), it would be a bit counterproductive to claim, Diane Carey style, that NCC-1700 or perhaps NCC-1701 was the first "real" starship in the universe.

IMHO, that is.

Timo Saloniemi
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top