The blueprints of the E D, as well as the TNG tech manual indicate a shuttle compliment of over 50.
Well that solves that. Wow. Never got the impression they had so many.
The blueprints of the E D, as well as the TNG tech manual indicate a shuttle compliment of over 50.
The shuttle thing bothered me too. How many shuttles does this ship have ? It doesn't seem realistic to me to keep alot of them onboard when you have transporters. A few yes but enough to evacuate 800 people ?!
In this new timeline, lifepods dont seem to have been invented, or if they have they are exclusively used to maroon troublesome officers. So they probably would have a lot more shuttles aboard than we are used to, even if most of them are outfitted as lifeboats.
I doubt 23rd century life support systems rely on stored tanks of O2. That's not to say it wouldn't stretch the life support systems to their breaking point. But then again, if they are supposed to serve as lifeboats, we can give the engineers credit for not being idiots, and assume they thought of that.
Militaries change.
Admiral Nelson received his first command at the ripe old age of 20.
Like Kirk, he was a Big Damn Hero.
Unlike Kirk, who is the Big Damn Hero of a fictional world, Nelson actually existed and won victories that saved Britain.
They never really gave you a true sense of the size of the ship to begin with either. The Main Shuttlebay on the D is the better part of 2 stories tall. Go stand next to a 2 story building and look up.The blueprints of the E D, as well as the TNG tech manual indicate a shuttle compliment of over 50.
Well that solves that. Wow. Never got the impression they had so many.
I am thinking along the same lines. After all McCoy went to the academy as a medical doctor. A 17 year old Ensign Checkov suggest that all officers don't go through the academy as years of TV series have suggested. SFA may serve the same function as the elite war colleges where potential senior leaders are sent. Kirk can be explained by an Officer and Gentleman type OCS program before entering the academy with Uhura.I was thinking we don't get what SFA is. Pike talked about his dissertation. What if schooling has changed and the academy is a PhD level program for people coming in with a college level education. This would allow variable completion times to come into play.
Further, I offer that the displinary meeting and commissioning was only for graduating cadets, based on the amount of red squad... er cadets I saw on earth when the drill was lowered.
And lastly, Uhura is a Cadet and a Lt.... based on dialog when she relieves the Enterprise communications officer. Saavik is the same, in star trek 2 going from failing the no-win scenario to being a lt on the bridge... and weeks later, serving as a lead scientist on the grissom.
Kirk is never referred to by rank BECAUSE he was made first officer of the Enterprise before he ever served a shift.
Its possible you can enlist as a ensign (like a college graduate can now), you can take your education and go to an elite war college/science college/international relations college and come out at a higher rank and fast track career.
The key to this story is what was Captain Pike doing. When he made kirk an overnight cadet... that may have been an exceptional favor and not a regular recruitment tactic. You can't go from a bar fight to being a Naval Academy student overnight... it just cannot happen. When he made Kirk the 1st officer to Spock, he opened a door in his command hieracy where the 2000 odd people on the Enterprise now called an instanteously reassigned first officer sir. When he picked Kirk as his relief over every available captain and first officer in the fleet, he made an intergalactic statement of the type of fleet he plans to build.
If a fleet of battleships, owned by the government, is engaged in a war with battleships owned by another government, firing torpedoes at each other, and whose officers can be subject to a court-martial if they disobey orders, what word other than "military" could you possibly apply to that?Yes, Starfleet often talks like a military, but from the top to the bottom on all possible dimensions, it rarely walks like a military (even a notional 23rd century military). If it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, it's a duck. But if it's a college student walking around an amusement park in a duck suit earning money to pay down her college loans...
On the question of military realism, the only thing that slightly—and I do mean slightly—bothered me was the apparent reversion to the "all officers, no crew" writing of the TNG era. DS9/VOY had sort of fixed that problem by acknowledging there were NCOs and crew on board.
Do agree with those upthread that in an ideal world, the writers would stick to the 18th/19th Century Royal Navy concept—something like the HMS Beagle being a lot more like Starfleet than the modern US Navy—but we're long past the point where we can have any real hopes for that.
The shuttle thing bothered me too. How many shuttles does this ship have ? It doesn't seem realistic to me to keep alot of them onboard when you have transporters. A few yes but enough to evacuate 800 people ?!
In this new timeline, lifepods dont seem to have been invented, or if they have they are exclusively used to maroon troublesome officers. So they probably would have a lot more shuttles aboard than we are used to, even if most of them are outfitted as lifeboats.
Seemed to be a cloud of small objects where the Kelvan had been-lifepods?
Just saw the movie-loved it. Too much fun. Piss on canon-this was a great romp!
If a fleet of battleships, owned by the government, is engaged in a war with battleships owned by another government, firing torpedoes at each other, and whose officers can be subject to a court-martial if they disobey orders, what word other than "military" could you possibly apply to that?
Starfleet academy is training cadets to be officers in the fleet. The fleet that fights wars and transports soldiers to battles. It's like arguing that the U.S. Navy is not a military organization.
When the United Federation of Planets is at war, there is only one military organization that is depicted, and that is Starfleet. What possible evidence exists that Starfleet does not act as the ONLY military organization of the Federation?
Maybe some people view Starfleet as the modern-day NASA, which is mainly a scientific organization, but most NASA pilots are U.S. Air Force officers, and the minute you outfit the Space Shuttle with ray guns and torpedoes, it has become a military vessel.
as for kirk i wonder seriously if jim had thought about the academy taken the tests and for some reason decided not to go further with it.
remember that line about his aptitude tests being off the chart.
for all we know kirk might have attended college but not done anything with his life since leaving it.
Don't you people pay any attention at all? Kirk is 25 in that movie.
He hadn't graduated. He was in his THIRD YEAR. And when you graduate, you are an ensign.
Well first, Pike says Kirk could be done with the Academy in 4 years and he says "I'll do it in 3". Then it says "3 years later". So the implication was that he graduated early.
He went from a third-year cadet (a junior, for god's sake) to CAPTAIN -- from O-zero to O6 in five minutes.
Again, he was a graduate not a cadet.
Yeah, I recognize that. But a *singular* achievement does not negate the need for training and experience.
Clearly, he didn't NEED any more training or experience. He took command of a ship that was set to not aid Earth *at all*, turned the situation around, and literally saved the planet.
And again, Horation Nelson was a Captain at 20 and Stephen Decatur was commanding the Enterprise at 19 and was a full Captain by 25.
Your definition of "strains credulity" flies right in the face of naval military history.
The military structure of the 20th century, where promotion is based on tenure as much as anything, is certainly not the only way competent fleets have ever been organized.
In fact, history has frequently been written by extremely young, "inexperienced " men taking command of troops.
Alexander the Great had conquered the known world by the time he was 30. Talk about straining credulity! Except, you know, it actually happened.
I was thinking we don't get what SFA is. Pike talked about his dissertation. What if schooling has changed and the academy is a PhD level program for people coming in with a college level education. This would allow variable completion times to come into play.
I took this to be another case of a writer not knowing what really goes on. I took it to be a reference to a senior thesis, which some schools require; or, perhaps, like other officers, Pike attended an advanced graduate school *after* graduating from the academy (as many academy graduates today still do) to learn more intensive material useful for his command (I know academy grads with advanced degrees in international relations, history, languages, area studies, etc.).
And again, Horation Nelson was a Captain at 20 and Stephen Decatur was commanding the Enterprise at 19 and was a full Captain by 25.
Your definition of "strains credulity" flies right in the face of naval military history.
The military structure of the 20th century, where promotion is based on tenure as much as anything, is certainly not the only way competent fleets have ever been organized.
In fact, history has frequently been written by extremely young, "inexperienced " men taking command of troops.
Alexander the Great had conquered the known world by the time he was 30. Talk about straining credulity! Except, you know, it actually happened.
You realize that these "young men" had already spent half or more of their lives DOING what they were doing, right? They *got* the experience, they moved up through the ranks. (Alexander doesn't count: It's good to be born a prince, you get your general's stars with your baby rattle, but you still have to be taught tactics by your father's generals, and learn how to fight and start of leading small groups and wings.)
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