So even before TMP came along the ship had three designations:
Heavy Cruiser Class
Starship Class
Constitution-class
And all three are likely correct designations from Starfleet's point of view.
So even before TMP came along the ship had three designations:
Heavy Cruiser Class
Starship Class
Constitution-class
It could possibly work like this:And all three are likely correct designations from Starfleet's point of view.
It could possibly work like this:
Starship Class - Heavy Cruiser Class - Constitution-class
Yeah. Which is basically what I said earlier upthread. At some point and for a time the term "Starship" became romanticized and applicable to only a specific type of vessel. Later it fell back into more conventional and general use.I tend to think "Starship Class" and "Starship" are just a romanticized view of certain types of ships that somehow became official for a bit of time in the 23rd century. Starship and Constitution class are likely referring to the same kind of ships.
...
This dovetails into another issue. MJ once stated the Enterprise was the first of the 17th major design for Starfleet--hence the registry 1701. But if it is a Constitution-class ship then technically wouldn't it then be at best the second ship of that class built? Perhaps the Constitution of that class only existed on paper for the sake of the project's development and no ship of that class was actually commissioned with that name?
Or MJ was rationalizing an explanation for a question he got tired of answering for the thousandth time.
Yes, this. Simple and easy to understand.All starships are spaceships but not all spaceships are starships.
I like this a lot. I'm thinking I'll probably incorporate this into my personal headcanon now.I've long had an idea, fueled by something I read in Diane Carey's novel Final Frontier, that Robert April was already an established Starfleet commander when he was assigned to head up the Starship Program--the development of the Constitution-class cruisers. The successful program resulted in April being rewarded with command of one of the first ships built and his return to acrive flight duty. Additionally it was April who brought individuals such Richard Daystrom and Lawrence Marvick with their specialties into the project.
It's certainly not canon, but just an idea in the back of my mind.
To be fair, my Silly Putty cannon ball fan fiction is REALLY good.Which is about as canon worthy as canon balls made from SillyPutty..
Good idea. Sort of like how the prototype space shuttle USS Enterprise never actually went out into space.You can still make that work with a real Constitution NCC-1700. I have always imagined the NCC-1700 U.S.S. Constitution being the prototype ship, and remained as an experimental testbed for some time (sort of the NX- type of the 23rd Century), and NCC-1701 U.S.S. Enterprise was the first of the class to be built and sent out on missions.
Yes, this. Simple and easy to understand.
I like this a lot. I'm thinking I'll probably incorporate this into my personal headcanon now.
To be fair, my Silly Putty cannon ball fan fiction is REALLY good.
Good idea. Sort of like how the prototype space shuttle USS Enterprise never actually went out into space.
In the same way that I am a time traveler. I seem to be traveling through time--previously in the past, currently in the present, and I move inexorably to the future.I had an argument with someone once, who called the space shuttle a starship. "Well it goes up into the stars, doesn't it?"
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Where was it written that Starfleet would use the exact same numbering system as NASA?Kind of like it. Except that the Space Shuttle Enterprise was actually OV-101--which argues against a prototype having a "00" number.
Interestingly the shuttle program can also provide for the registry numbers before NCC-1700. Shuttle Challenger was OV-099 and was built from one of the test articles. Columbia was OV-102.
Enterprise was suppose to go in to space, but the government felt it was cheaper to rebuild test articles and later use spare parts rather than rebuild Enterprise for flight.
Pathfinder is OV-098.
Well, since I was the one who made that suggestion in the first place, I still don't why NASA not using "00"s on their ships has any bearing on what Starfleet does. They're two different organizations. It stands to reason that they might not do everything the same. I was drawing a comparison on the NCC-1700 not seeing any service in space, not the registry numbers.The point of all this is that there was no "00" orbiter hardware. So having NCC-1700 being an early "prototype" is not, in fact, like the early prototyping in the Space Shuttle program as was suggested.
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