Naming a ship after somebody's first name?What about Franklin Pierce?
It's a long shot.
And if you Google "President Franklin," FDR comes up.
Naming a ship after somebody's first name?What about Franklin Pierce?
It's a long shot.
Franklin Pierce cost too much to stencil on. A penny saved is a penny earned when it comes to ships.Naming a ship after somebody's first name?
And if you Google "President Franklin," FDR comes up.
StarFleet doesn't operate on those types of economics =DFranklin Pierce cost too much to stencil on. A penny saved is a penny earned when it comes to ships.
If you mean Ben Franklin, he wasn't a president.
I was always under the impression that the Franklin was named after STB director Justin Lin’s dad, Frank Lin.The ship was named for J.J. Abrams's grandfather. The thing is, I didn't know that his grandfather was named Franklin, and since Franklin is a pretty common name, and there is a major historical figure with that same last name that one could presume the ship was named after in-universe, there's really no problem.
I was always under the impression that the Franklin was named after STB director Justin Lin’s dad, Frank Lin.
The other weird one I can think of is the 'Excelsior II'-class USS Excelsior NCC-42037, with a registry higher than the USS Eureka NCC-42023. Would the class ship of the 'Excelsior II'-class also be called USS Excelsior, anyway?So both the Akira and Ross prototypes have registry numbers higher than other Akira and Ross class ships.
The other weird one I can think of is the 'Excelsior II'-class USS Excelsior NCC-42037, with a registry higher than the USS Eureka NCC-42023. Would the class ship of the 'Excelsior II'-class also be called USS Excelsior, anyway?
You're mixing up the Franklin, named for Frank Lin and the Kelvin, which was named for JJ's uncle. He names something for uncle Kelvin in all of his films, and now he's got a whole timeline named for him.Perhaps I’m misremembering.
No, because it isn't an Enterprise. In this era only Enterprises got letters.and shouldn’t it be NCC-2000-A or whatever.
You're mixing up the Franklin, named for Frank Lin and the Kelvin, which was named for JJ's uncle. He names something for uncle Kelvin in all of his films, and now he's got a whole timeline named for him.
The other weird one I can think of is the 'Excelsior II'-class USS Excelsior NCC-42037, with a registry higher than the USS Eureka NCC-42023. Would the class ship of the 'Excelsior II'-class also be called USS Excelsior, anyway?
The U.S.S. Constitution was NCC-1700 while the U.S.S. Constellation was NCC-1017 so this isn't exactly new to Trek in any century of in-universe history. Registry numbers have little logic to them.
It hasn't.but has the 1700 registry for the Constitution ever been canonically confirmed on screen?
We don't know when the ship was launched.I find it more irritating that a new 25th century ship class would use a 4XXXX registry number than the Excelsior having a higher reg than the Eureka.
And that's the joke flying over the head.StarFleet doesn't operate on those types of economics =D
We don't know when the ship was launched.
1700 was used, from the ST:TM Constitution-class page, to represent the Enterprise in Search For Spock. I think it came up on Data's superfast reading in TNG S1 although not sure that counts either.I know I'm going to sound like 'that guy,' but has the 1700 registry for the Constitution ever been canonically confirmed on screen?
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