Well, the tiniest. Save for the Miranda, which might be considered "puny" rather than "tiny".
Of the offered SF ship classes in the 24th century, the Intrpid seems to be of 'medium size'.
Off-screen, it was mentioned by Voyager writers the ship has same weapons as the Galaxy class.That claim would require the sort of proof we cannot have because the two ship types never meet the same sort of opponents. With perhaps three exceptions: we never see an Intrepid do quite the same sort of damage to a Borg cube as the E-D did, or drill quite the same sort of holes in bedrock, or perform the famed alone-against-fifteen-Galors trick (as you say, less than a dozen Kazon ships of similar or worse primitiveness are usually her match).
We don't know if smaller encompassing phaser strips result in smaller power output. That was never confirmed. I find it more than likely the Intrepid class was to be a downsized Galaxy class.
Less luxuries by comparison but still large enough to be it's equal in combat.
We've seen small ships that were a match for much larger ones. the Defiant comes to mind, and while it WAS 'overpowered' for it's size, there's a good chance that all new classes post Wolf 359 are in fact 'overpowered for their size'.
Point was that the 4 Kazon carriers would likely present the same threat to the Galaxy class just as they did to the Intrepid.
And need I remind you the Galaxy class woefully failed in combat against a 20 year old BoP?
Realistically, The Enterprise-D should have blown it out with 1 or two Sierra firing patterns.
Plus, as the years went by, the Galaxy's firepower was also equally diminished and torpedo firing capabilities slowed down to what we saw in Voyager (which was equipped with type 6 photon torpedoes - best available during it's launch)
The Intrepid has about a dozen phaser strips like the Galaxy, yes. But of different, smaller size. And at least four torpedo tubes against the two of the Galaxy - but again markedly smaller, and firing fewer torps with less destructive witnessed effects. There's no onscreen reason to believe the weapons alone or in concert would be equal to those of the Galaxy.
there is no reason to think otherwise. As I already said, smaller phaser strips don't necessarily equate to smaller power output.
And as for torpedoes (look at my upper reply).
What else could it mean, though? That all the Intrepid skippers were cowards?
Hardly. DS9 decided to make it's own choices in terms of used ship classes and whatnot because they wanted as least as possible of other shows to 'bleed' through into theirs.
Or simply superior speed to escape from battle - an ability the ship type is explicitly credited with. Couriers in the sailing ship era might have been warships, because a courier had to be fast, and a sailing ship could only be fast if it was large, in which case it could just as well be a warship to boot. But courier tasks in the steam and oil era were given to weakly armed and unarmored sprinters rather than to primary combatants, and the aircraft and vehicular worlds made an even clearer distinction between combatants and couriers.
Comparing contemporary or even older ships/tech to Trek cannot be done.
Picard himself laughed at the attempt in 'the Neutral zone'.
Which might be because there aren't many of those ships around. If the same reason keeps the Intrepids out of the Dominion War, what does that tell us? Sovereigns are big and probably slow to build, but Intrepids are barely the size of a Sovereign nacelle. Why aren't they being churned out at a faster pace, so that they could appear at least as often as the Defiant class of similar size and apparent great complexity?
Maybe they have and the Intrepids were used during the Dominion War, just not in battles we've seen.
We also don't know how many of them were constructed.
How many Defiant class ships have we seen in Ds9 again?
Less than 6 most likely.
And only because the Defiant became the 'hero ship' on that show.
The Intrepids could have been present in other fleets for example that hadn't been seen on-screen. Besides, out of 600 SF ships in 'Sacrifice of Angels' we have probably SEEN less than 50 (that doesn't mean the other 550 were sitting on a lunch break).
Sure. But that still leaves us wanting for an in-universe explanation.
Of course, but at the same time, I find it sensible to apply the following reasoning: just because something was not used in great quantities, doesn't diminish it's worth.
Besides, the Dominion War was predominantly fought with ships that were relatively old and upgraded over time.
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