I don't see a big problem with a floating 1701, myself, and would expect Voyager to be a bit more dense than 1701, but not wayyyyy less dense. Voyager is the only one we know for sure is more dense than water; Enterprise-D isn't (around .86 by your volume numbers). 1701 at a million tons would be the outlier, so I can't view 190,000 tons as nonsensical. The "gross tons" thing is a bit odd and a number of non-canon sources support the 190,000 ton figure, so it works for stuff like this.
1. Why would one expect Voyager to be more dense than Enterprise-1701?
2. Voyager is not the only one we know for sure to be more dense than water. Enterprise-1701 is, too, as is the Klingon Bird-of-Prey which sank in San Francisco Bay (average depth 14 feet, so it didn't sink far, but still). We also have it implied that Jem'Hadar battlebugs sink, though in fairness we cannot be 100% certain of its seaworthiness (e.g. hull holes) when it sank.
3. Why would Enterprise-1701 be the outlier? How can you even have an outlier from two stated points? (If anything Scotty's "Mudd's Women" comment sets the standard.)
4. The "gross tons" thing is not really odd. I would like it better if he'd said "metric tonnes", sure, but we know what a "gross ton" (not the volume kind) is. It's not odd . . . it's just the nature of the language and naval lingo.
5. Why does non-canon information work for stuff like this? I thought "that screaming "non-canon!" by itself shouldn't carry extra weight, unless a canonical source contradicts a non-canonical one".
1. Why would one expect Voyager to be more dense than Enterprise-1701?
The Tech Manuals are putting out there this idea of the warp coils being the most massive components of the ship, densifying over time to do their jobs better
, and of subspace fields being used to reduce the relative mass of the ship for more effective impulse propulsion.
I think it is sensible that Voyager is probably made of denser materials and is more robust than a ship from over a hundred years before,
the BOP...I haven't seen the movie in a while, but didn't the bay doors get opened to let the whales out? Glub glub.
I didn't state only two points; I brought in Enterprise-D as well. Its designers had a mass in mind and thus a density can be calculated; you may enjoy pointing out that this is not canon, but I feel it is relevant to the discussion
I certainly don't think the use of the term points to a carefully researched line that was supposed to carry a technical validity about the design of the Enterprise.
5. Why does non-canon information work for stuff like this? I thought "that screaming "non-canon!" by itself shouldn't carry extra weight, unless a canonical source contradicts a non-canonical one".
First, I don't remember screaming.
Second, the thread is obviously not limiting itself to the single line from the single episode, or it wouldn't justify its own existence. Most Trek Tech threads are not and probably should not be instantly answered with a simple reference to a line from an episode.
Roddenberry evidently signed off on the 190,000 ton figure when it appeared in the Franz Joseph works years after the episodes were produced, so those so inclined could take it as his final word on that particular tonnage issue.
We all know that Enterprise-A has 78 decks, right? It was on screen.
1701: 27,842 tonnes
1701-A: 26,662 tonnes
1701-B: 58,569* tonnes
1701-D: 280,204 tonnes (or something like 50k tonnes more than 1701-A)
1701: 27,842 tonnes
1701-A: 26,662 tonnes
1701-B: 58,569* tonnes
1701-D: 280,204 tonnes (or something like 50k tonnes more than 1701-A)
Care to try again?
1701: 27,842 tonnes
1701-A: 26,662 tonnes
1701-B: 58,569* tonnes
1701-D: 280,204 tonnes
(* Stock Excelsior nacelle)
Actually, not only did GR sign off on FJ's calculations (he used modern - at the time - naval vessels for equivalents) but he would go on to use them himself when it came time to write the TMP novelization.
Actually, not only did GR sign off on FJ's calculations (he used modern - at the time - naval vessels for equivalents) but he would go on to use them himself when it came time to write the TMP novelization. FJ was an engineer, and knew his stuff. GR was not, admittedly. But the only reason that GR stopped using FJ's material was that Roddenberry was asserting his dominance on the franchise again. It would have been one thing if GR had found a new engineer or something to make 'corrections', but he was just being pissy. (And FJ was far from the only victim, he was just the most high-profile.)
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