Did ya miss me? I'm baaaaaaaaack!
I've refined a previous thought, and added some new ones.
What if I told you (by which I mean, I am creating out of whole cloth the notion) that there was a predecessor class to the Connies? I propose the USS Aster, NCC-1650. Why "Aster"? I'll circle back to that. The hallmark of the 16xx proto-Connies is the appearance given to the Enterprise as shown under Captain Pike (the Jeffrey Hunter version)...Bussards that don't glow (covered by armored caps, per Pacific 201, as a legacy of the recently-concluded Klingon War), with antennae on the domes (Tesla attractors to actively pull in hydrogen molecules, because armored caps interfere with passive collection), gooseneck monitors on the bridge, etc.
Enterprise (and the first few 17xx vessels) were supposed to have been built OEM as we saw her under Kirk, glowing spinning open Bussards, but ended up being actually built with Aster assemblies due to logistical delays -- but with provisions for quick drop-in refitting, later, as happened after Pike's tragic disablement. Later vessels were built OEM as seen in TOS. Asters were designed and built to be a more robust (if slightly slower) variant of (SNW) Sombra fast cruisers. Sombras do seem to have a bit of a "glass jaw", based on the one we've seen.
This brings some but not all known 16xx Connies into the fold, for the rest, I'd have to fall back on my "wartime NCC shell game"; we can assume that SOME were eventually upgraded, but not all (the Aster herself being excluded, which is why no-one's heard of her now), it being found to be quicker to build new rather than refit Sombras & Asters up to Connie specification.
In my headcanon the Sombra fast cruiser paradigm was then revisited and renewed with Franz Joseph's Decatur/Belknap/Ascension-class vessels.
My other new thought is, another reason why Aster would be unceremoniously buried by Fleet Command: it was at the center of an embarrassing (for Fleet) Universal Translator glitch. "Aster" of course means "star" (it is the rootword in "Ad astra per aspera"). The autocorrection-style glitch occurred because the ship name was automatically translated instead of being passed verbatim as a Latin loan-word. Thus the "Star" ship class was born. Fleet initially laughed it off, even leaned into the error as late as when the Enterprise's dedication plaque was struck, but then leadership changed and it wasn't funny any more, and all such references were buried. Sounds outlandish, but stranger things have happened.
None of this, naturally, has any more authority than my own imagination. I'm putting it out there in the hopes that others might see the sense of it and adopt it themselves.
I've refined a previous thought, and added some new ones.
What if I told you (by which I mean, I am creating out of whole cloth the notion) that there was a predecessor class to the Connies? I propose the USS Aster, NCC-1650. Why "Aster"? I'll circle back to that. The hallmark of the 16xx proto-Connies is the appearance given to the Enterprise as shown under Captain Pike (the Jeffrey Hunter version)...Bussards that don't glow (covered by armored caps, per Pacific 201, as a legacy of the recently-concluded Klingon War), with antennae on the domes (Tesla attractors to actively pull in hydrogen molecules, because armored caps interfere with passive collection), gooseneck monitors on the bridge, etc.
Enterprise (and the first few 17xx vessels) were supposed to have been built OEM as we saw her under Kirk, glowing spinning open Bussards, but ended up being actually built with Aster assemblies due to logistical delays -- but with provisions for quick drop-in refitting, later, as happened after Pike's tragic disablement. Later vessels were built OEM as seen in TOS. Asters were designed and built to be a more robust (if slightly slower) variant of (SNW) Sombra fast cruisers. Sombras do seem to have a bit of a "glass jaw", based on the one we've seen.
This brings some but not all known 16xx Connies into the fold, for the rest, I'd have to fall back on my "wartime NCC shell game"; we can assume that SOME were eventually upgraded, but not all (the Aster herself being excluded, which is why no-one's heard of her now), it being found to be quicker to build new rather than refit Sombras & Asters up to Connie specification.
In my headcanon the Sombra fast cruiser paradigm was then revisited and renewed with Franz Joseph's Decatur/Belknap/Ascension-class vessels.
My other new thought is, another reason why Aster would be unceremoniously buried by Fleet Command: it was at the center of an embarrassing (for Fleet) Universal Translator glitch. "Aster" of course means "star" (it is the rootword in "Ad astra per aspera"). The autocorrection-style glitch occurred because the ship name was automatically translated instead of being passed verbatim as a Latin loan-word. Thus the "Star" ship class was born. Fleet initially laughed it off, even leaned into the error as late as when the Enterprise's dedication plaque was struck, but then leadership changed and it wasn't funny any more, and all such references were buried. Sounds outlandish, but stranger things have happened.
None of this, naturally, has any more authority than my own imagination. I'm putting it out there in the hopes that others might see the sense of it and adopt it themselves.