Exactly this. They went from having trouble scraping together 39 ships at Wolf 359, to having thousands of them in DS9.
War will do that for ya. Compare the US navy in 1934 to 1944.
Exactly this. They went from having trouble scraping together 39 ships at Wolf 359, to having thousands of them in DS9.
I think at least as interesting a question of "how big" the fleets, is "what are they made of". Obviously for budgetary reasons we saw mostly Galaxies, Excelsiors and Mirandas, with a few Nebulas and occasional "FC" models like the Akira. But it strikes me that while the former is plausible (biggest most advanced and highly adaptable, Excelsiors and Mirandas are at least two generations out-of-date in technical terms so shouldn't really be on the 'frontlines' as combat vessels (although the Miranda might make a decent logistics support/SpecOps platform, and we probably should have seen more Galaxy kitbashes or Ambassadors, and of course Intrepids.
Thoughts?
They went from having trouble scraping together 39 ships at Wolf 359, to having thousands of them in DS9.
On a scale of 1-10, where 10 is maximum usefulness?I'm not sure how useful using registry numbers are to make a judgement.
But that one year might represent an increase in Starfleet's already heavy ship building schedule, trying to find a way to squeeze out a additional 39 ships on top of (maybe) 500 ships a year.The Federation needing one year to replace the Wolf 359 fleet is the best starting point for an estimate.
Six to eight months? That would be less than a year.What does "We will have the fleet back up in less than a year"
During the second world war in America, while there was a war time draft and the military was paid, the lines "around the block" at recruitment offices wasn't owing to either one of those.How likely is it that people would join Starfleet in apparent "excess" numbers?
Come war, what would and could change? The suicidal-homicidal maniacs among the population would still wish to enlist, but would now be joined by eager patriots. But the machinery would be geared for the small peacetime intake, and optimized for keeping people out (if Wesley Crusher can't get in, underage or not, then "0.03% of the population" is not a realistic estimate for people capable of getting in - 0.000003% might still be optimistic).
During the second world war in America, while there was a war time draft and the military was paid, the lines "around the block" at recruitment offices wasn't owing to either one of those.
Would the civilian population of the federation be smart enough to realize that their civilization was in a fight for it's existance?
Your figure (0.000003%) only allows for 300,000 personnel
The Federation doesn't appear to spend a great deal of time "at peace."The 0.03% figure was presented as referring to the peacetime military
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