I reasoned that given that the phasers Geordi was preparing were somewhat specialized so they could knock out the Tamaran field generators in a single salvo that he mounted them in or around the torpedo tube in order to get better access to power conduits from the warp core.
The 3rd time Riker went up against the Borg ship in Earth orbit he was within about a second "Eng.." of ordering a suicide ramming and a few seconds more from the Enterprise being destroyed outright.
For all we know the Reliant was newer and more advanced than the Enterprise.
Plus, Enterprise had a crew of cadets and a very rusty "captain" (Kirk basically admitted as much).
Plus, The Wrath of Khan was pretty obviously inferred to be several YEARS after The Motion Picture.
For all we know the Reliant was newer and more advanced than the Enterprise.
Plus, Enterprise had a crew of cadets and a very rusty "captain" (Kirk basically admitted as much).
Plus, The Wrath of Khan was pretty obviously inferred to be several YEARS after The Motion Picture.
The Reliant being newer or not is not relevant here, as it is clearly not anywhere near the level of V'ger, everyone knows that.
The point is Kirk managed to stop such a superior threat that was V'ger and the Enterprise was unscathed, yet 12 years later his ship was battered and bruised from something far less threating.
So are we saying Kirk is a shitty commander? Because the same reasoning is being used on Riker.
Well the "Encounter at Farpoint" one no longer applies as it's been fixed in the HD version.
The Galaxy class was explicitly designed to be adaptable and to serve as major ships of the line for decades, with a projected operational lifespan of around 100 years, and they were in production for ten years before the Sovereign was.
<SNIP>
Frankly, I'd expect to see them in about equal numbers, with Galaxy-class starships perhaps being more generally assigned to diplomatic and humanitarian missions, and Sovereign-class starships being more generally assigned to combat-oriented or defense missions.
I think the Vesta-class is unlikely to ever appear in large numbers, because of the relative scarcity of benamite crystals. The Vesta, I would imagine, would play key roles in task forces that require speed and the projection of sudden force across vast distances, but I don't think they'd ever be capital ships.
Meanwhile, I'd expect to see Luna-class starships continuing as the primary long-range deep space exploration ships, to see Akira-, Defiant-, and Intrepid-class starships as the main supporting ships in defense and science, and Nova-class starships as the main support research and scout ships (replacing the Oberth-class starships in that regard).
But with Sovereigns being a smaller and newer design, I would expect Galaxy production to slow or halt in favor of Sovereigns as well as being surplanted asthe front-line ship. This makes sense resource-wise.
Not if the underlying assumption of most sources about the ships' relative design functions is accurate. Most sources seem to say that the Sovereign is a more combat-oriented class, which implies that the Galaxy is oriented more towards scientific research and exploration.
Further, smaller is not always better. A Galaxy-class starship, precisely because it is larger, can be preferable to a Sovereign-class starship, depending upon the mission. If a starship is called upon to transport large numbers of people in an emergency situation, or if it is called upon to transport a great deal of cargo or matériel, then a Galaxy-class starship is obviously preferable to a Sovereign-class starship.
We can reasonably presume that a Sovereign-class starship has a lower cost in resources, but that doesn't mean that it's the better choice for all missions or that it's as capable in all circumstances as a Galaxy. Guided missile cruisers are less expensive than aircraft carriers, but that doesn't mean they're always the right tools for the job.
Wasn't macho enough, so they discontinued it.
Remaining G-class ships were sold to Princess Cruise Lines. They now take people to Rigel and other attractions.
Frankly, by the time the Dominion War was over, I would seriously question the sanity of Starfleet Command if they didn't decide to cut their losses and phase out the Galaxy-class.
Deks said:The biggest example of this being the Lakota - my theory on it would be that SF needed to bring it's fleet into fighting shape, and since it takes a lot less resources to upgrade older ships than it does to build new ones (I mean, come on, transporters and replicators being used to replace old internal systems/designs with new ones by recycling the old as well as being used in construction of new ships too).
The Lokota defending rebellious admirals plotting against starfleet on earth IMO was a bit of a joke,
after all her so called upgraded it still was slapped up by a glorified 24th century shuttle craft.
Had Berman and braga got their way they would have put 20 uprated connie class ships against the Defiant.
The in-universe reasoning is shocking, why go through all that planning to usurp the Federation and use an old ship that cant even stop a trigger happy shuttle craft with a crew of 5 people.
Given recent TrekLit developments regarding slipstream drive, wouldn't it be sensible to slipstream a few Galaxy-class ships, with small fleets trailing them, out to the perimeters of unexplored areas of the Milky Way?
Want viewers want is quality entertainment, whether that be political (The West Wing), Mystery, Adventure etc..
Also Star Trek isn't just about 'Trekking to strange new worlds'.
So what is it about???
You saying Star Trek has actually become greater from Gene Roddenberry's concept of humans growing by exploration, adventure and learning of the universe to the repeated use of spaceships shooting purple and green alien space ships week in week out?
And there lies the problem ..... you can't just make up some theory like "Federation ships have better shields" to cover up the why a small Federation ship is mysteriously more dangerous than any larger ship in the ST universe,
The human race in the TOS era was supposed to be a huge step away from what we know and what we understand as a society and race. The TNG era was also a huge step forward from what the human race (Federation) were in the TOS era - should Starfleet or the Federation be able to deal with problems without having to shoot at it?? Have the human race not learned and grown beyond 20th century methods of conflict resolution of building craft with big guns.
Have the human race not learned and grown beyond 20th century methods of conflict resolution of building craft with big guns.
To quote Janeway:
"When diplomacy fails, there's only one alternative; Violence."
I can think of at least two others off the top of my head.
'Walk Away'
'The Threat of violence'
it should be noted that the Saratoga (Miranda) and the Vico (oberth) both had families onboard. However the later was a starfleet vessel on loan to civilians.
But it does show that in the 24th century Starfleet might consider families to be on all ships and made provisions for them. This appears to disappear by the Intrepid completely, so whether or not these are exceptions (including the Enterprise) we don't know. But there are interesting side notes to consider.
I imagine that the loss of life suffered even by ships posted to the core Federation worlds as a result of the Battle of Wolf 359 would have prompted Starfleet to re-examine its policies of allowing families aboard.
Only if it were a novel turn of events, though. For all we know, families have been dying horribly aboard starships for the past century or two, and everybody accepts this downside because of the major upsides.I imagine that the loss of life suffered even by ships posted to the core Federation worlds as a result of the Battle of Wolf 359 would have prompted Starfleet to re-examine its policies of allowing families aboard.
It is possible if it wasn't for the debris from the kamikaze hitting the nacelle, the Odyssey might have been able to limp away.
Kirk and his Enterprise managed to stop V'ger and made it vanish, yet in the sequel his ship gets a sucker punch in the face by a Miranda class commanded by someone who never commanded a Starfleet ship before. It's all very circumstancial.
Khan very nearly succeeded in taking over the Enterprise in "Space Seed," and that was implied in no small part to be due to a genetically superior memory - he studied the ship's engineering details and knew how to control the key systems. One can easily infer he did the same when he took over the Reliant, though as Spock mentioned he wasn't an experienced commander the way Kirk was.
It is possible if it wasn't for the debris from the kamikaze hitting the nacelle, the Odyssey might have been able to limp away.
True. Federation starships do seem to be highly vulnerable to nacelle damage. See "Cause and Effect".
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