Hi I was just wondering if anyone knows where the name NCC-1701 on the Enterprise comes from?
Q: Where did the numbers NCC-1701 come from?
MJ: The rumors ran around, I know, for a long time that the numbers on my airplane came off the Enterprise and others said it went on the Enterprise from my airplane. It did neither. I didn't go to much of a great extent to squash that rumor. I just thought it seemed to be so much fun. The number was on the airplane when I got it and that was a year after the original Star Trek folded.
NC stood for the United States Commercial and Russia wound up with CCCC for their national markings. Of course, it had been said for a long time that no one country could afford to really go up into outer space. Well of course Russia was sort of our counterpart in the space thing, I said, "Well, we'll use some of each" so it became NCC. For numbering I needed numbers that could be instantly recognized. Therefore three, six, eight, and nine would not work I said, "One seven. Okay, so it's "17th" basic design for the Federation. Serial number one. A prototype. 1701". I did put that on paper to guide anybody else following — thought I didn't know if anyone else would want to follow it — but the second ship of the same type would have been a "02" and a modification would have a letter. Standard military practice. But that's basically what it was — a number you could pick up immediately.
Well, it's not a name, it's a registry number. The "Naval Construction Contract" is an unofficial/fan explanation for what the NCC stands for (some fan sources have used "Navigational Contact Code" instead). In real life, aviation buffs Gene Roddenberry and Matt Jefferies chose it based on some common aircraft registries. Here it is in Jefferies's own words:
http://www.startrek.com/startrek/view/features/firstperson/article/143.html
Q: Where did the numbers NCC-1701 come from?
MJ: The rumors ran around, I know, for a long time that the numbers on my airplane came off the Enterprise and others said it went on the Enterprise from my airplane. It did neither. I didn't go to much of a great extent to squash that rumor. I just thought it seemed to be so much fun. The number was on the airplane when I got it and that was a year after the original Star Trek folded.
NC stood for the United States Commercial and Russia wound up with CCCC for their national markings. Of course, it had been said for a long time that no one country could afford to really go up into outer space. Well of course Russia was sort of our counterpart in the space thing, I said, "Well, we'll use some of each" so it became NCC. For numbering I needed numbers that could be instantly recognized. Therefore three, six, eight, and nine would not work I said, "One seven. Okay, so it's "17th" basic design for the Federation. Serial number one. A prototype. 1701". I did put that on paper to guide anybody else following — thought I didn't know if anyone else would want to follow it — but the second ship of the same type would have been a "02" and a modification would have a letter. Standard military practice. But that's basically what it was — a number you could pick up immediately.
...but the second ship of the same type would have been a "02" and a modification would have a letter. Standard military practice.
...but the second ship of the same type would have been a "02" and a modification would have a letter. Standard military practice.
Huh... that could be the explanation for the letter prefixes..
Christopher, it is official, since it both was published and personally signed off by Roddenberry. Now, it's 'canonicity' (particularly in these days without canon) is up to question, naturally, but it is official.
Which is why I made the distinction. "Official" includes a wealth of material, including RPGs, video games, and such, which came from licenses and other works. And, yes, much of that work is contradictory.
What makes the "Naval Construction Contract" unique is that not only was it official (from one of the earliest of the Star Trek licenses, no less, the Star Trek: Blueprints), but that Gene Roddenberry had personally signed every single sheet with his authorization. Of course, this is well before the 'great falling out' which decanonized such things.
But, like I said, in lieu of anything else consistant and carrying anything near that much weight, NCC pretty much stands as "Naval Construction Contract".
^^Of course Roddenberry signed it -- he'd put his name on anything that he could potentially make money from. I doubt he gave a second thought to the suggestion of what the letters stood for, if he was even aware of it at all.
Except that it doesn't really fit the way registries have been shown, what with all the ones that start off with NX, NAR, NSP, etc.
Such early assumptions or half-baked rationalizations are best forgotten at the first sign of contrary evidence - it just doesn't do to stick to the old at the expense of the innovative.
Well, almost. If it comes from the studio and becomes part of the onscreen pseudofactuality of the Trek universe, then it of course supersedes whatever some earlier people quietly mused about but failed to turn into a Trek fact. If it comes from some other source than the studio and still somehow manages to become part of the onscreen universe, again it supersedes all the inconsequential musings that never were part of that universe. And if it comes from the studio but fails to make it on screen, then it is of no consequence to the universe. Clear enough?So, let me get this right... Someone at the studio comes up with a half-baked idea and fans should rush to embrace it and forget every other explanation, regardless of who came up with it, or how good it is, just because it is from the studio and thus it is "innovative"?
If you want to believe they stand for "Newfangled Cosmic Contraption," you're entirely free to do so.
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