Actually this could be debatable. In TMoST there's a mention of the Enterprise class or something to that effect.
Actually, TMOST screwed up and called it a 'Constellation Class' ship, an error that Bjo Trimble copped to a long time ago. Gene Roddenberry himself signed off on 'Constitution Class' for Lincoln Enterprises. I don't think you can get more official than that.
And the first time Constitution-class is actually referenced is on Franz Joseph's blueprints, but that ship diverged in so many ways from the Enterprise we saw on screen that its validity can be questioned.
Not really. With that logic, you have to say that every different miniature used in the show were all different ships. It's just that FJ had access to the smaller miniatures than the 11 footer.
And the idea that FJ was drawing the Constitution and not the Enterprise doesn't wash with me. We all bought that set expecting to see schematics of the ship we knew onscreen and we didn't get that.
For all practical purposes, for 1975, you did. While you can argue some errors and inconsistancies, I think that it STILL holds out as an amazing job of turning Hollywood sets into a largely workable starship based on next to no information.
I know that it's 'en vogue' for some fans to shit all over FJ and his work, but I think it's utterly ludicrous to compare the first work of its kind ever to what some fans can do 30 years later... Why not lambast Okuda for all the errors in the Encyclopedia and current technical manuals which were supposedly made as backstage materials?
Also note that in TWoK (if you accept it) there's a visual reference to Enterpriseclass and that raises an interesting wrinkle.
I don't know why this is an issue. It was well known that between TMP and TSFS that the refit was called 'Enterprise Class' in much of the background materials, and this was overridden come TNG's pre-production. It's another example of a minor continuity change due to later work.
But the idea of 'if you accept' the fargin'
Wrath of Khan' shows a rather absurd level of fanboi elitism, doesn't it? If you're going to ignore the single most successful aspect of Trek, period, when discussing issues of 'canon' and 'continuity', then how you expect to be taken seriously in your arguments?