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Starship Size Argument™ thread

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Are you talking about these?

enterprisebeyond.jpg

enterprisebeyond.jpg
Yep, those are the ones.

Assuming the "less ample" nacelles are correct, looks to be roughly the same length
 
Heck, the Enterprise-A had over 70 decks in Star Trek V. The Enterprise-E went from 24 decks to 26 in the same movie, and then at least 29 in Nemesis. And don't even get me started on the inconsistency of the Defiant.

Little OT
I know it's not canon, but I have Always tought that the Constitution refit has 4-5 decks on saucer rim, not just 2,
Are you talking about these?

enterprisebeyond.jpg

enterprisebeyond.jpg

The Beyond JJprise is uglier than in the first two movies.
 
Meh. Isn't there a quote from Roddenberry about being able to park a fleet of 747's in the Enterprise hangar bay back in the 60's? Then there is McQuarrie's Planet of the Titans remake that looks like it would've been absolutely huge.

I'm still not sure why a bigger ship is a problem?

It's not really a problem to me, just making an observation. Whichever one someone prefers is up to them.
 
Well, he definitely wants things to be "bigger"... in Force Awakens he opted out for a 1200m in diameter Starkiller Starbase instead of a 160km in diameter Death Star...
If you saw what JJ's actual idea for how Starkiller Base was supposed to work, you'd have been impressed with his showing of restraint.
:beer:

Honestly, I like it bigger. When I figured out the size of the original, it kinda disappointed me that it's only the size of a current day aircraft carrier.
Volumetrically, it's not even THAT large. A good portion of the TOS ships length was that of the warp nacelles and the thickest part of the saucer -- the part large enough to enclose 8 full decks -- is only about 40 meters wide, with the rest of the saucer being a only one and a half decks thick.

I've said it many times here, but it needs to be remembered that Length is not the same thing as size. That also needs to be remembered that in terms of internal volume, the reboot Enterprise is still just only 65% as large as the Galaxy class and MUCH of that volume is in its warp nacelles.
 
It's plain and simple. The Enterprise from 2255 shouldn't be larger than the Enterprise from 2372.
It isn't. It's actually about two thirds the size (see above).

ETA: I found my numbers from way back in the day.
Reboot Enterprise has a volume of 2,824,395m^3
Enterprise-C has a volume of 2,871,310m^3
Enterprise-D has a volume of 5,820,983m^3
Enterprse-E has a volume of 2,429,193m^3

So the only ship the reboot Enterprise is bigger than is the Enterprise-E. Which sort of begs the question "Why is the E-E so much smaller than its two predecessors?"

The answer, of course, is "Who the hell cares?"

And not twice as large as its Prime Universe counterpart.
Since the destruction of the Kelvin, we no longer have any way of knowing what its prime universe counterpart would have looked like. It's entirely possible -- even likely -- that the Enterprise we're seeing in the reboot films wound up being named been named "USS Dreadnaught Entente" in the Prime Universe.

We agree we like them bigger so why stop at 725 meters? Why not make it 1600 meters, the size of a Star Destroyer. Oh, I know, let's make it 3200 meters so it can be double the size of a Star Destroyer!
They did that with the Vengeance already. Half of us were thinking the Enterprise-A would be a demilitarized dreadnaught class anyway, but instead they surprised us and gave us a totally new (and kind of awesome) redesign that's about the same size as the first one. :bolian:
 
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It isn't. It's actually about two thirds the size (see above).

ETA: I found my numbers from way back in the day.
Reboot Enterprise has a volume of 2,824,395m^3
Enterprise-C has a volume of 2,871,310m^3
Enterprise-D has a volume of 5,820,983m^3
Enterprse-E has a volume of 2,429,193m^3

So the only ship the reboot Enterprise is bigger than is the Enterprise-E. Which sort of begs the question "Why is the E-E so much smaller than its two predecessors?"

The answer, of course, is "Who the hell cares?"


Since the destruction of the Kelvin, we no longer have any way of knowing what its prime universe counterpart would have looked like. It's entirely possible -- even likely -- that the Enterprise we're seeing in the reboot films wound up being named been named "USS Dreadnaught Entente" in the Prime Universe.


They did that with the Vengeance already. Half of us were thinking the Enterprise-A would be a demilitarized dreadnaught class anyway, but instead they surprised us and gave us a totally new (and kind of awesome) redesign that's about the same size as the first one. :bolian:
I wish they had used the Vengeance, it would have been worth it for the thread meltdown alone.

For the deniers it would have been like wall to wall :wah::wah::wah::wah:

For me it would have been like :drool::drool::drool::drool:
 
Ha! Thanks for those (I already have the Ortho saved to my desktop, for me to drool at), but I appreciate your enabling me!

:biggrin:
 
We got all of one short shot at the end of the movie. Transitioning out of and into two bookending sequences that could have had a lot to do with the way that shot was animated.

For all we know, the low light level and glare were to hide the fact the middle isn't entirely rendered, at least not as much as the one earlier in the movie.

We'll see a more refined model in the fourth movie, which will look pretty much he same as it does now, just polished up. Don't worry, she'll look better in the right light with better angles.
 
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