I don't think that's a shuttlebay.The one over-riding thing I can't understand about the Zheng He is why the shuttle bay is in the front of the saucer. That just looks weird to me.
Yep, it was going to be the first canonical thru-deck carrier in the fleet. At least, that’s how it was initially designed.IIRC, the concept was it was one big bay that went through the middle of the saucer, launching from the front and landing in the back.
According to designer, Alex Jaeger, "This was my gunship/battlecruiser/aircraft carrier. It has 15 torpedo launchers and two shuttlebays - one in front, with three doors, and one in the back. I really got into it with this one, with the whole idea that the front bay would be the launching bay, and then to return they'd come into the back, because they'd be protected by the rest of the ship." (Star Trek: The Magazine, July 1999, Issue 3)I thought the Akira class had the shuttlebays in the back? You can see two areas marked 1 and 2 on the back when she sweeps past camera in First Contact. Or does it have three, like the Galaxy? A big one in front, two small in back?
I'd be happy to plead refits so that ships from the early 24th century still would remain valid and serviceable in the late. But this puts me in an unhappy place because we then should be seeing refit standards all across the map, with Ambassador style or Galaxy style engines, with short and medium strip phasers, with different paint jobs at the very least. Where's my variety? Where are the deliciously ancient examples that put an evil smile on the faces of the crew of the Cerritos?
The design is absolutely fine. It looks like it could follow on from the Prometheus/Sovereign, 15-20 years later.
I'd have preferred more variety, but for a rapid-reaction force it probably makes sense to have the same design.
The one thing I find weird about the Inquiry class is that, from the front, it looks like Chinese pagoda. Is that deliberate? If so, that's one of the weirdest forms of pandering to the Chinese market I've seen so far.
I see the resemblance, but I’m sure it’s just a coincidence.
I badly want to see an episode where we get to see a species join the Federation and refit all of their ships into Starfleet ships. Around the Picard era, the Xindi or Gorn are likely candidates.
The ship is called Zheng He, man. It's not a coincidence.
True but it's not exactly the same. And of course we don't have the orthos of Eaves' ship to compare it to.The ship was based on a design John Eaves made for a defunct video game ten years before.
Okay, I might be exaggerating. Might've heard that somewhere, but I guess not canonically per se. It definitely seems to be one of the largest overall, though.Do we canonically know, that UP shipyards produced far more ships than any other shipyard in Starfleet?
We don't even know how many other shipyards there were in the Federation when Mars started burning. Let alone how that number has changed since then. If every UFP member has as many yards between them as Sol system did...I'm not sure how I feel about the Inquiry-class being 630 meters long (according to Eaglemoss).
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There were at least one hundred and twelve of them at Coppelius -- I just hand-counted that many off of a screenshot of the Coppelius Standoff -- and while I could be severely underestimating the capabilities of Starfleet's other shipyards, but I'm not sure if building a single-class fleet of over 100 large vessels (comparable to the Galaxy or Sovereign in size) after their largest and most robust shipyard was effectively obliterated. There weren't nearly that many Sovereign-class or Galaxy-class starships that we knew of.
Then again, god knows how many Excelsiors and Mirandas were built. Then again, they were a good bit smaller than this beefy ship...
Memory Alpha lists seventeen known shipyards across the UFP within the primeline that aren't Utopia Planitia, so...fair point. I guess I was always under the impression that UP was its biggest and most robust. 112/17 makes about 6.5 Inquiries per shipyard -- which, I dunno. Maybe I am underestimating the logistics and overestimating the time + resources spent on making huge ships like the Sov and Galaxy -- and I guess the Inquiry now.We don't even know how many other shipyards there were in the Federation when Mars started burning. Let alone how that number has changed since then. If every UFP member has as many yards between them as Sol system did...
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