...but the backlash from my win has basically took the fun out of it. I know I was CLEARLY not the fan favorite....
Just repeat after me.. "It's the INTERNET... it's the INTERNET."
Seriously, you can't take the viciousness of some people on here (where they are entirely safe from having their noses punched into their sinus cavities, as they so often deserve!) as anything but that. Most of the most vicious attacks you'll see are from people who, if faced with you in a private, face-to-face, one-on-one situation would be fwightened widdle girls...
That said, it's also appropriate to just avoid situations where you are subjected to these nasty little cretins if they won't leave you alone. I've been there... in fact, until this very thread, I've stayed away from the TrekBBS for more than a year, because this site has its own share of that sort, and these people do tend to get a pass in some cases for reasons I've never quite been able to grasp. Still, the TrekBBS also has some really great folks, and you're more likely to get a fair shake in this particular forum than in many other places on the 'net, or even on this BBS.
So... don't let the bastards get to you. You WON. Plain and simple. Your design may not have been my first choice, but it's a fine design concept, and there are certainly elements of it I particularly like. That the rest of the contest may have had elements of unfairness does not in any way reflect on your concept.
Grow a thicker skin. If you don't like the abuse, you can walk away... there's nothing wrong with that. But you shouldn't let it BOTHER you.
I remember, with the Titan contest, that I felt a certain "kinship" with Sean, and tried to engage in some constructive dialogue at the time. I said that I had a preference for the "Titan" to be more of a "getting back to the classic Trek design style," whereas Sean's design was much more in line with the TNG-and-later design style... and I suggested a few tweaks to the impulse engine placement... but otherwise, I was very supportive of his work.
That said, I immediately came under some ferocious criticism... not from Sean, but from a few others (including a couple of marginally-successful Trek authors). And they seemed to want to turn it into a "war" between Sean and me, which was never remotely something I wanted, nor do I think it was something Sean wanted.
Add to that the ongoing (even to this day) attacks I get on my design, even from a few of those folks on this BBS... I was told it was a "kitbash" (then again, Sean was told his was as well... neither of which was remotely true!) and unoriginal and so forth. I was told it was ugly, ungainly, goofy, stupid, etc, etc. The number of attacks on me, PERSONALLY, was really very high. I left the S&S forums entirely because every post I made, regardless of topic or content, resulted in at least a dozen "shut the @#$* up and go die" responses, which made it totally "un-fun." So I came here, where I only got that response in the "Trek Lit" forum (and mainly from a couple of the less-talented authors in there, which never especially bothered me), and from two or three (admittedly damned persistent!) critics who are still regulars on this BBS.
I never minded the minor "I don't care for this or that" comments (mainly focused on the high-power, long-range scanner array in the "nose" of my ship) because most... MOST... of those were made by people who were thoughtful commentators. That's why I stayed active here for a long time. (It was only when the "trolls" started dogging me from post to post, forum to forum, just to harangue me that I finally walked away from this place last year.)
I'm throwing this out to emphasize that you need to keep this in perspective. It's not an attack on you, or your design, if someone else presents their own design even after you've won. A LOT of people put forth tremendous effort into this, and they (understandably) will love their own efforts. Unless they LITERALLY rip into you and yours... don't allow this to make you feel like that's what they're "really" doing.
As I said, before, I really LOVE Fuzzy's design. And I want to see that as a fully-developed starship. As I said before, that would have been my first choice.
But this is not, in ANY WAY WHATSOEVER, a criticism of yours. And I can imagine your concept being developed into a fine design. I certainly like it better, aesthetically, than I ever liked the 1701-D's configuration, yet that is still the "best realized" of all of the ships we've ever seen.
Keep some perspective. You WON. You will, hopefully, be as fortunate as Sean has been, and will be recognized as the "designer" of the 1701-F as he is of the Titan. There is no reason to get "sulky" about it.
It's the freakin' INTERNET. Ignore the vicious bastards... as long as you're having fun with it, ENJOY IT.
And don't take every critique or statement of preference which isn't 100% in your design's favor as an attack. "Constructive criticism" is a good thing, and there are plenty of folks (more here than in most other places on the net, honestly) who'll give you exactly that... while there are only a few "jerks" around here, relatively speaking. (And as long as you're not on their radar, like I got myself by challenging the "clique" here on a few occasions, they'll probably leave you alone!)
Now...
I'd like to point out something I proposed a while back, in fact... it was in my "Cary's take on the 1701" thread (still yet to be pruned from this BBS, so you can find it under my profile if you really want to see it). We were talking about the original TOS Enterprise design, and in particular about the "magic" required in some places. I'd been talking about the one element of the TOS design which I simply didn't like from a mechanical engineering standpoint, and how I'd have altered that design (had I been there in 1965) to make it more suitable from my standpoint.
In a certain sense, what you've done is similar to that, I think.
I'm also somewhat fond of the potential for the ring-pylon as a secondary (low-yield) FTL drive system for the saucer. I've long had a problem with the idea of a primary-hull "lifeboat" which would take decades or even centuries to get to an inhabitable world. Non-FTL "lifeboats" are suitable only in the "civilized" realms... not in the frontier regions.
(FYI, for those who haven't heard my previous rants on the subject, I'm one of those who doesn't necessarily equate "faster than light" with "warp drive." In other words, I see "warp drive" as being one specific drive system capable of FTL propulsion, but there are certainly others as well, including the TOS-centric establishment of "impulse" as being capable of FTL as well (albeit what I've defined as "subspace-assisted impulse," which I hold to being what was in common usage prior to the "time barrier being broken" just few years prior to "The Cage", and limited to about 75C)
I do think that your concept, once fleshed out, can be turned into a fine design. I'm pretty sure that part of the "unofficial criteria" from CBS/Cryptic was that the design should be vague enough for them to do whatever they want with it. (I wonder if Fuzzy's design was just too SPECIFIC for them?) Your ship could be smallish, or it could be bigger than my "intergalactic explorer" concept, as far as we can tell from your sketch, after all.
(This is another reason I really preferred the Titan contest... the ship's size, functionality, and general role were all described in reasonably full detail... so we knew what the ship had to be, what it had to do, and why. The only real issues were "what will it look like?")