Not at all. The main arguments in favor of the chart being a repair status at this point are largely emotional/subjective.
I made the point that the danger to the Enterprise shows that many ships were not present. To the point that ten ships are on the chart with three at levels near the Enterprise upon her arrival, I'm told that this makes Kirk into a monster because he didn't realize noting her presence would send Finney into a murderous rage rather than produce negotiation. There's also the suggestion that the ships are immobilized despite the slightly-better Enterprise having arrived under her own power, which seems like wishful thinking.
The other main surviving argument seems to be over the 'need' for the chart from a story perspective, as opposed to it being just set dressing that helps sell this as a base in charge of ships and Stone as in charge.
But, I covered that in
my first message on this subtopic.
The "Measure of a Man" chart had zero to do with anything in the story . . . it was there to fill in the viewscreen on the battle bridge set. I bet Riker even looked at it at one point in his courtroom efforts.
Similarly, "STAR SHIP STATUS" / "% COMPLETE" doesn't give the status of Maintenance Section 18 or realistically indicate how long repairs will take for any vessel or provide any clues as to what's broken on the ships listed. And, of course, there's the big honking gap of having the supposed repairs be 80% complete on a ship whose captain has just made "a full report of damages" to the base commander, with never-before-pulled computer logs, and with repairs only noted as being in progress afterward.
I ask you, what was at 82% complete? Had Scotty done 80% of the work? Then why the layover for just a couple of days and why would it even show as work done on the Starbase's chart? The "repair base" chart shouldn't include it.
It objectively cannot be repair status, ship readiness, or anything else other than mission status. The ships on the list are not ships that are present at Starbase 11, but apparently a list of vessels of a certain registry range that may have 11 as a command base at that time.
Percy Rodriquez scans the chart and then delivers the line of dialog about switching maintenance to the Enterprise.
The eye line thing is bogus, but yes, the actor is gazing upon the chart immediately before looking at his other desk screen and changing the task of Maintenance Section 18.
That was likely actor/director blocking rather than script (had the chart not been there he might have simply been looking out the window instead), but I'd love to see the script to know for sure.
Either way, that supports my view more than yours, to wit:
1631 isn't just the most complete it's at 100% with an extra black bar next to it. that implies any repair crews aboard are in the "clean up tools" stage.
That was Jein's suggestion also, but it really doesn't make sense. There would be no need for a maintenance section to be attached to a ship marked as having repairs complete. Back when I thought this was a repair status also, then the natural follow-up at this point was to curse the silly Jein reverse-alphabetical schtick.
However, if the Intrepid was simply done with her mission rather than repairs, then it makes perfect sense.
(The fact that we don't see the chart in the Inquiry scene would seem to reinforce the idea that the chart is just there for that line of dialog.)
Funny, I was told this was a repair base. How could that screen be off if repairs are ongoing at the repair base?
And of course one would expect a flag officer in charge of a repair base to be wearing red and not green/gold.
Ask Commodore Mendez who ran the same base later that year.
After learning that the main energy circuits had been tapped out, Kirk could have ordered that no one else board the ship, or if they already had then that they be beamed back down immediately.
Kirk learned it while dealing with a crazed Finney, and like two seconds later noted that she was probably already aboard, which drove Finney to murderous rage rather than negotiation. We don't know when Finney did the deed specifically, but we do know that this effort at a subjective emotionalist counterargument is not working. Besides which, maybe you ought to watch "The Omega Glory" and get back to me on Kirk's willingness to have a female hostage in the first place.
Spock could have ordered that Jamie not be allowed to board or that she be beamed back down if she already had boarded.
What makes you think Spock knew anything about it?
Spock could have insisted that the court be evacuated, even over Stone's objections. But, no. Since Jamie and everyone else were allowed to remain aboard when everybody knew of the sabotage and the orbital decay, it is enough to infer that there was still a safety margin and that everyone could still be safely evacuated from the ship and the ship repaired, all in time. To believe that there was no safety margin within which to evacuate everybody, you'd have to believe that all of the characters were monsters.
I feel bad even quoting this embarrassing paragraph to reject it, but none of this is any good. You want a Commander to kick a Commodore off the bridge, you think Spock even knew of the visitor, and you then do mind-reading to concoct a safety margin even for the previously unknown sabotage. You do the same mumbo-jumbo a few lines later when you claim:
From Kirk's encounter with fellow officers in the lounge, it was crystal clear that many officers had already made up their mind about Kirk. Indeed, the premise was that everybody thought there could be no error in the computer record.
Nobody in the bar said anything about the computer record. Jamie's breakdown accusation came without it, too. You're just making stuff up now.
Where have I said how many Starship-class vessels I think were present, especially those that were operational?
You accept the chart as a repair status for ships at the base, do you not? That's ten.