I like the four engine Yamato from Starfleet Command the best--the four engines look natural on it.
Hi all,
The Constellation class (and one or two other classes) had four warp engines, why do you suppose that was?
I'm looking for an in-trek need as opposed to the obvious "cool" factor.
Specifically, the Constellation class; is it a need for speed or perhaps a high speed over a protracted distance?
My thinking is that a starship with twice the amount of engines, uses twice the amount of fuel.
All those shuttle bays and a lack of an obvious navigational deflector makes me think of a ship that went from starbase to starbase delivering supplies - it looks like a cargo ship as its missing a lot of the aesthetics of most exploration ships.
Is it a tug with powerful doubled up impulse engines? It looks like a work horse.
Or is it a deep space class, the Stargazer was quite a way out in deep space to have been completely lost for so long (easily explained away by the last minute change from the refit miniature to the constellation).
What is this clunky (by comparison) looking starship, with four engines and rather a lot of shuttle/cargo bays for in your opinion........?
Steve
I've always imagined that Starships with more than 2 nacelles had them for one of two reasons:
1) Redundancy. If you're a frontier vessel, or out of effective support range if you have catastrophic engine problems, having backups makes sense, from the "oh my God, can I get my people back home?" standpoint.
2) An analogy that I've always liked is that of subwoofers in a home theater environment. One is good and is the minimum required. Two smoothes out the response in the room. Four smoothes it out even more, and allows higher output. Imagining that warp fields involve some sorts of frequency emissions that can be effectively tuned by having multiple nacelles, the subwoofer analogy is a good one in my mind.
YMMV.![]()
Going along with the increase in silhouette, that also adds to a tactical problem in battle, I can see the extra two nacelles getting in the way a little.![]()
[If the warp nacelles work in an alternating fashion, then the Constellation should be able to hang in a firefight longer than most of its contemporaries.
Unfortunately, all nacelles of a certain design (say, those of the Constitution, Constellation, Miranda/Reliant and Sydney) tend to be the same size, as they are just reuses of the same kit piece or mold... They are also placed at more or less the same distance from each other. So four will actually double the silhouette over two.
Timo Saloniemi
Rotating the respective MicroMachines models of the ships in your hands (while making the appropriate whooshing sounds)
...The funny thing is that the Warp Five Engine came first, and the Warp Two Freighters later, in in-universe terms. Sort of.
That is, freighters being limited to warp two was a concept introduced in "Friday's Child", which takes place a century after "Broken Bow" that introduced the warp five engine (while also mentioning the warp two freighters). So we're prompted to ask: what gives? Why no progress in freighter propulsion during this century, when military vessels improve their performance from warp five (-plus) top speed to warp ten-plus top speed, and apparently also from warp three'ish cruise to warp six'ish cruise?
Timo Saloniemi
You can't compare such a large oceangoing container ship to a frigate - the size alone (and the waterline length) warrants comparison with aircraft carriers or the biggest of fuel and ammunition ships, which are rated for either sustained or semi-sustained 30'ish knots. Smaller freighters don't outdo frigates, for obvious reasons.
Then there's the current trend of running various freighters a couple of knots below their designed most efficient speed because of the changing definition of "economical" - whereas warships are being built for ever-faster operations, at the expense of endurance, because deployment speed and, increasingly, escape speed matters.
And why aren't there fission-powered transports? The technology is more reliable than large diesels and quite useful for around-the-globe tankers, container ships, car transports and other vessels with high at-sea percentages... Hauling of fruit might have been an application, too, for the sustained speed. But things like that are market-driven, while fighting generally is not. (Okay, it's probably even more market-driven than trade, but when the hardware is designed and acquired, those arguments are ignored.)
Timo Saloniemi
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