Probably a stupid question, but I can’t remember, has anyone brought up the German Tank Problem in relation to the issue?
Jaeger was (as stated) a meteorologist not a historian, so relying on him for an accurate assessment of the historic periodic of the decor is dubious at best (especially when our heroes tend to lump all pre-21st century dates under the catchall of "old Earth").Trelane didn't mention it. Kirk established they were nine hundred light years from Earth at the beginning of the episode, before they detected Gothos and were discussing how they were in an unusually empty part of space, and then Kirk and Jaeger/Yaeger the meteorologist said, specifically, to each other, humans and Earth-nationals, that Trelane's décor was nine hundred years old, reiterated that they were nine hundred light years from Earth, and the discrepancy could be explained if Trelane was studying Earth via light-speed telescope.
You bring up an interesting point - Trelane's planet is indeed mobile (as demonstrated when the Enterprise attempts to flee it) so we don't even have a reliable means to measure distance from the Earth, even assuming that his observations are limited to that of the lightspeed.So, unless it's standard operating procedure for Starfleet to mentally convert all their time and distance units to the local standard, and unless they were lying in the teaser about Gothos being unknown and popping up out of nowhere after Kirk first mentioned how far they were from Earth, and unless Gothos, a self-propelled rogue planet, was moving in some fashion that could be described as a "year," I don't know what you're on about.
Jaeger was (as stated) a meteorologist not a historian, so relying on him for an accurate assessment of the historic periodic of the decor is dubious at best (especially when our heroes tend to lump all pre-21st century dates under the catchall of "old Earth").
You bring up an interesting point - Trelane's planet is indeed mobile (as demonstrated when the Enterprise attempts to flee it) so we don't even have a reliable means to measure distance from the Earth, even assuming that his observations are limited to that of the lightspeed.
Can you point to what year and month? Are you talking about the NCC-1000 design that looks like an NX-class ship from Enterprise but with only one hull extension, instead of two, and a more TOS-like hull patterning? In that case, it is entirely possible the ship looked like that when it had only hyperdrive, and then was updated to the look it had during TOS when it got "warp" drive.I’m going with the new version of the Bonaventure class shown in the ship of the line calendar, rather than the TAS one with my reasoning. I’m not really a big fan of the TAS design.
A. The Sol yards took out two hundred contracts in preperation for several new classes of starships in a relative short period of time, even if it would be a decade or two before all the contracts were filled.
B. USS Constitution has a much older number like USS Constellation, and USS Enterprise and several other ships of that class build in the Sol System were ordered in a later batch.
C. Sometimes a ship class is planned for a larger run and the next class to come up starts with a hull number after that planned number. However sometimes the class doesn't get ordered at that number, so some hull numbers go unused. Could a 10xx class have been planned to 18 hulls, but only ordered 16 hulls, but the following class took say 1018+ hulls. Thus later an extra Constitution-class ship gets ordered and instead of a new 17xx number, Starfleet goes back and picks 1017 for that extra ship.
Probably a stupid question, but I can’t remember, has anyone brought up the German Tank Problem in relation to the issue?
C. Sometimes a ship class is planned for a larger run and the next class to come up starts with a hull number after that planned number. However sometimes the class doesn't get ordered at that number, so some hull numbers go unused. Could a 10xx class have been planned to 18 hulls, but only ordered 16 hulls, but the following class took say 1018+ hulls. Thus later an extra Constitution-class ship gets ordered and instead of a new 17xx number, Starfleet goes back and picks 1017 for that extra ship.
Digging into some terminology from "The Cage" and taking a closer look at screenshots from TAS, it may be possible to rectify TOS registries with classes of ship. Here's the short version, more details below: The Bonaventure's real canon registry could be 1028, and it was an early faster-than-light "hyperdrive" ship, converted to "warp drive," while later ships were true "warp drive" ships.
Here comes the reasoning
The Bonaventure from TAS is listed as having the registry 10281NCC. This seems too high. BUT...as would be correct for that time, and just as the Enterprise had in "The Cage, the number "1" and the letter "i" were represented by the same character. Meaning it really says "1028 i NCC" or "i 0281 NCC or "i 028 i NCC"
Let's ignore the use of the term "warp drive" in 2001's "Enterprise" for the moment. In "The Cage," the term "hyperdrive" is used, but Tyler speaks of a "time" barrier being broken. Perhaps, in its day, "hyperdrive" was a slower, but still faster than light, version of warp drive, and still the term used in shipboard commands, while the Enterprise had a true "warp drive," breaking the "time" barrier.
Scotty of all people, should know what he means when he says the Bonaventure was the "first ship to have warp drive installed." Perhaps this ship belongs to the same class as the Constellation NCC-1017, and maybe even the Eagle NCC-956. These ships had slower "hyperdrive," and while not the oldest, Bonaventure was the first to be a testbed for installing the faster "warp drive." Constellation and Eagle were later refitted to appear like Constitutions.
I have a TV guide from 2001 in which Berman and Braga say that they decided not use UESPA on "Enterprise" because it was unfamiliar to audiences, and that they used "warp drive" instead of "hyperdrive" because they felt it was a generic term that they would not trademark. I can't find it now, so I can't give the exact issue. So the terminology used in "Enterprise" is not able to disprove this theory.
Consequences of this thinking:
Maybe that is also why ships like Exeter and Excallibur have lower registries than 1700. They were also older designs refit to Constitution spec.
Maybe the reason no one trusted the Excelsior at first was that it was the first true redesign of starships. A Bonaventure-type could by updated to a TOS-style; a TOS-style to a TMP-style, but Excelsior might have been a totally new platform with almost no structural or functional relationship to older ships. I think that makes a ton of sense.
Yeah that probably was the original intent though no one can find Bob's original illustrations - someone scooped them up when Filmation dissolved. Surprisingly since it was in 1973 and he had do about 100 more illustrations for that same ship afterwards he doesn't remember exactly what was there!I find it awesome that a simple registry fragment on the saucer ("CC") has become those great looking saucer-sensors-whatever they are! Blame the original artists for coloring them white thinking they were actually a feature of the ship.
Also it would be really lopsided, as most of the registry would be on the starboard part of the saucer!Interesting! If Bob mentioned the registry was meddled with after he sent in his drawings, he may have nothing to do with whatever ended up on the saucer.
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