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The Much-Maligned TAS Bonaventure

Cary L. Brown, just have to say this (if it sounds stupd, please disregard) :)That last rendering almost reminds me of an Oberth sort-of look (I know the config is different) like a smaller, earlier TOS science/research vessel. Maybe it's the shape of the primary hull...

Very cool, like it alot.

Also, love the rear nacelle details.
 
I
Now, in the TAS episode in question, the crew of the Enterprise finds this ship, lost in the "Delta Triangle." It's commented that this was the "first ship with Warp Drive."

This goes along with my personal supposition that Warp Drive is just an outgrowth of the prior FTL propulsion system

Not an Enterprise fan, I take it?
(They used the term 'warp drive' in that series as well.)

And, as anti-Okuda as this forum tends to get...I feel I must point out that the Encyclopedia version of the Bonaventure actually appeared onscreen. It was in Keiko's classroom. Linky
 
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And, as anti-Okuda as this forum tends to get...I feel I must point out that the Encyclopedia version of the Bonaventure actually appeared onscreen. It was in Keiko's classroom. Linky

Well, except that there is nothing to suggest that the Okuda Bonaventure is the same as the TAS one. In fact the very article you linked to says:

Memory Alpha said:
The Bonaventure is likely a predecessor to the Bonaventure (10281NCC).
 
Well, except that there is nothing to suggest that the Okuda Bonaventure is the same as the TAS one.

I wonder which one the Ships of the Line version is supposed to be.

I find myself hoping that it could be used to replace the one shown in TAS; that Bonaventure did not exactly fire me up (IMHO, it looks too much like the Enterprise).

And I still don't buy the line that the TAS Bonaventure was the first ship with warp drive. I don't see any onscreen evidence that FTL travel (as used by Earth, anyway) was ever called anything other than warp drive. So the ship in TAS can't be the first ship with *any* kind of warp drive (otherwise it would have to be of the same time period as the Phoenix and the SS Valiant, and this is extremely unlikely); however it could be the first one with the latest *refinement* of warp drive. The first one that can go faster than a specific warp factor, for example.

I agree that I'm also grasping at straws with that one...but is that any more or less so than claiming that prior ships used a different form of FTL propulsion that was not called 'warp drive'? ;)

Also, check out the thread "Ghost ship - My DY-1000 Bonaventure". It suggests that the Bonnie was the first ship that could go faster than Warp 7 (in line with my suggestion above). Plus it has Ptrope's extremely cool Bonnie design. :techman:
 
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I now see where you are coming from:

I actually imagine this being built at the same time as the "Baton Rouge" class starship... which is what I've always imagined was the class of the first ship Kirk commanded (prior to being promoted to the rank of Captain and being put in command of Enterprise)... .

:confused: From Scott being surprised to see her and feeling it necessary to tell his fellow officers including Kirk what they are actually looking at, as well as the assumption that their descendants may still be alive, I have never considered the Bonaventure to be a 23rd century star ship. That is why I called the resemblance to the Enterprise in TAS unfortunate and that is why I applaud your effort so much to leave the overall concept intact yet set it further apart on the detail level. (BTW the warp engines are coming along very nicely, too!).

If you look, you'll notice that my earlier "pre-tweaked" version had a simple cylindrical resonator assembly
That I did notice.
(btw, that's MY term, not anything I've ever heard in "official trekdom" documents... it just looks like a resonator to me!).
Seems a very reasonable idea to me.
I adjusted it to make it look more like the animated shot...
IMHO yours look smaller and more tapered than in TAS.
and actually, I think it's much more aesthetically pleasing with the taper as well.
Right on - too much so!

Regarding the tapered aft of the engineering section:
over the years I've often wondered why Matt Jeffries
But MJ was not around for the Bonaventure (not yet in the Trek universe; not any more, as far as active involvement is concerned, in the real world)!
put that in there to begin with, and I've come to two conclusions:

1) It makes the design feel a bit more graceful... ie, it's a positive on purely aesthetic grounds. Yes, that does matter... just not as much as the technical stuff does. ;)
Exactly my point for proposing not to do it here as it defies the purpose!

As for why I don't want to see tons o' greeblies... it's pretty simple, and it goes back to the Jeffries concept. If you're going to be flying in space, a very hostile environment to people, you want to avoid going outside unless you have no choice! So you keep as much of the hardware of the ship as possible INSIDE, where you can work on it in your shirtsleeves. If something HAS to be outside, the next best option is to have it detachable so you can go outside, unhook it, bring it in... and work on it in your shirtsleeves.

There's literally NO reason to have exposed piping outside of the hull... is there? Not unless the pipe is a heat-rejection device (like, say, an intercooler). If the plumbing can be run inside, it SHOULD be run inside.
Sounds very convincing - but is not really how it is done currently (and who will guess how long that is going to continue?). As mentioned above, Matt's revolutionary ideas were not yet around ;).

In short, make this into kind of a somewhat ugly duck from which would over time evolve the lovely swan!
That was the intention... and I hope I've succeeded, at least somewhat!

Sure you have succeeded - somewhat. I'd simply like you to succeed some more! :)
It really comes back to the dating. If the Bonaventure is simply some decades older than the Enterprise, you really have got her nailed. After all, how much outwardly different does CVN-65 Enterprise look from contemporary carriers? But if she was built a century or more earlier, as seems to be implied: Should she not be a bit more crude yet in comparison?
 
I
Now, in the TAS episode in question, the crew of the Enterprise finds this ship, lost in the "Delta Triangle." It's commented that this was the "first ship with Warp Drive."

This goes along with my personal supposition that Warp Drive is just an outgrowth of the prior FTL propulsion system

Not an Enterprise fan, I take it?
(They used the term 'warp drive' in that series as well.)
They did a lot of things in that series, many of which were overtly contradictory to things we'd seen previously.

My personal rule on "canon" is this... whatever was done first takes priority. It was ABSOLUTELY UNAMBIGUOUSLY established in TOS that it was possible to travel FTL without the use of "warp drive." (see "Balance of Terror," "Where No Man Has Gone Before," "The Menagerie," among others)

If you accept the argument that FTL = warp drive... than Kirk and his crew died of old age or starvation in deep space after their first unsuccessful attempt to penetrate the Galactic Barrier. Because they did NOT have warp drive at that point. It would have taken years, decades, CENTURIES perhaps, to reach any stellar system.

I'm not an "anti-ENT" person like some people are. But they were LAZY when they developed the "Enterprise" scenario... "Phase pistols?" A Vulcan science officer? Not to mention effectively recycling and "tweaking" the Akira design? I'm not saying it was an absolutely awful show... it wasn't, and it did have "high points." But it was inconsistent with previously shown Trek stuff...

And where post-TNG-era Trek materials contradict ORIGINAL Trek materials, and a choice NEEDS to be made... I choose to accept the original and to ignore the latter-day contradictory stuff.

Let's not make this into an EMOTIONAL argument, though, shall we?
And, as anti-Okuda as this forum tends to get...I feel I must point out that the Encyclopedia version of the Bonaventure actually appeared onscreen. It was in Keiko's classroom. Linky
Who had gotten "Anti-Okuda?"

I think Okuda's "control scheme" work was brilliant for the purpose it served, which was to make an extremely cost-effective means of making and modifying control panel layouts (all you do is print a transparency , put it between two sheets of plexiglass, and backlight it. Brilliant as a way to make stuff that's impressive-looking on a TV screen but costs virtually nothing to make!)

I'm not "anti-encylopedia" either... I think that they got a bit TOO detailed in trying to pin things down and really ended up hurting themselves, but at least they had the good sense to state, up-front, that nothing in the encyclopedia was "canon" unless it was seen on-screen and it was intended as a guide ONLY.

So what, exactly, leads you to believe that this is something relating to "anti-ANYTHING?"

My standpoint is simple... I'm pro-TOS. And TAS, while not at that same level, is something I view as being a "stylized representation" of "real" TOS events, too. Just as I hope I'll be able to view the new movie as being just another, not too dissimilar, view of the same TOS world.

So I don't necessarily accept the image seen on-screen of the Bonaventure as being "perfect" (but rather a stylized representation) but at the same time, I accept it as being an attempt to show us what it looked like. There's NO WAY that the image seen on-screen could be a "misinterpretation" of the "Encyclopedia" version. Those are ABSOLUTELY two different ships with literally no features in common.

Everyone has tried to "redo" it without carrying over the "design intent" of the ship as seen in TAS (well, with the exception of the image that Kail posted above...). I just wanted to try to make a Bonaventure that "works" in my mind but is still recognizable as the ship we SAW ON OUR TVS!
 
It was ABSOLUTELY UNAMBIGUOUSLY established in TOS that it was possible to travel FTL without the use of "warp drive." (see "Balance of Terror," "Where No Man Has Gone Before," "The Menagerie," among others)

I would hardly call those 'unambiguous'. In any case, any inconsistencies that arise in those episodes can be quickly and easily worked around, using points that are no more out of line than anything else expressed in this very thread.

If you accept the argument that FTL = warp drive... than Kirk and his crew died of old age or starvation in deep space after their first unsuccessful attempt to penetrate the Galactic Barrier. Because they did NOT have warp drive at that point.

I don't agree. Their warp drive may have been offline, but it was obviously repaired.

Who had gotten "Anti-Okuda?"

Everyone who went into a conniption just because he dared to contradict the Almighty God Franz Joseph's TOS Tech Manual?

that nothing in the encyclopedia was "canon" unless it was seen on-screen and it was intended as a guide ONLY.

Ah, there's that word again. Okay, then: I accept ENT as canon; you apparently do not. Fine. This is your forum, after all. I am but a stranger here. I wasn't aware this was a TOS-only forum. (As I've said elsewhere, ENT happens to be my *favorite* out of all Trek series. ) But I couldn't let this thing about the Bonaventure slide without saying what I felt. If this was a mistake, I offer much apologizings.
 
Really nice work!
And thanks for the links to hull fonts.
I've had such a hard time finding a good one.
 
It was ABSOLUTELY UNAMBIGUOUSLY established in TOS that it was possible to travel FTL without the use of "warp drive." (see "Balance of Terror," "Where No Man Has Gone Before," "The Menagerie," among others)

I would hardly call those 'unambiguous'. In any case, any inconsistencies that arise in those episodes can be quickly and easily worked around, using points that are no more out of line than anything else expressed in this very thread.

If you accept the argument that FTL = warp drive... than Kirk and his crew died of old age or starvation in deep space after their first unsuccessful attempt to penetrate the Galactic Barrier. Because they did NOT have warp drive at that point.
I don't agree. Their warp drive may have been offline, but it was obviously repaired.

Who had gotten "Anti-Okuda?"
Everyone who went into a conniption just because he dared to contradict the Almighty God Franz Joseph's TOS Tech Manual?

that nothing in the encyclopedia was "canon" unless it was seen on-screen and it was intended as a guide ONLY.
Ah, there's that word again. Okay, then: I accept ENT as canon; you apparently do not. Fine. This is your forum, after all. I am but a stranger here. I wasn't aware this was a TOS-only forum. (As I've said elsewhere, ENT happens to be my *favorite* out of all Trek series. ) But I couldn't let this thing about the Bonaventure slide without saying what I felt. If this was a mistake, I offer much apologizings.
You're REALLY anxious to turn this into something personal... why is that?

You will not be successful at luring me into a flame-war. Please drop it. If you want to talk about the design, talk about the design. If you want to talk about something else, start another thread and do so. If you want to level charges of "anti-whatever bias" against me... you're welcome to do so but that doesn't make you RIGHT.

I know how this works, and I'm not surprised it's happening again (attempts to lure me into flamewars, wherein suddenly a half-dozen "usual suspects" hit "report to mod" the moment I respond with anything less than bending-over-and-grabbing-my-ankles subservience). Not gonna work this time.

Any further comments which are off-topic or PERSONAL in nature will be left to Ptrope to deal with. Fair 'nuff?
 
You're REALLY anxious to turn this into something personal... why is that?

You will not be successful at luring me into a flame-war. ...

I know how this works ...

Any further comments which are off-topic or PERSONAL in nature will be left to Ptrope to deal with. Fair 'nuff?
Fair 'nuff.

The trick is to simply not respond to what one perceives as a personal confrontation ... in other words, don't make posts like the one quoted if you feel you are being confronted. Please, please hit that "Notify moderator" button - I'd much rather get that e-mail than the ones asking why I haven't responded to a rising flamefest; the problem is, with this new board software, we only get notified of the first new post since we last visited the forum, not of every new post, so anything could happen while we're, say, trying to make a living. But I get e-mail throughout the day, and a notification will get through.

This isn't the place for personal confrontations - and that includes posts whose main topic is stating this fact, unless they come from the moderator. You've got to agree to disagree, and when you do (and you will, obviously), there's no reason why you can't be civil. Make your point, support it as you wish, but don't take it personally if someone else's interpretation of facts and events may differ from yours.

C'mon, guys, let cool heads prevail. I don't enjoy locking threads and giving out warnings.
 
Okay, then, here is my point:

- I do not believe that the TAS Bonaventure could really be the first ship that ever had warp drive. There's simply too much evidence against it. Claiming that Starfleet used to use a different form of FTL travel is, IMHO, needlessly complicating things, and there's no evidence for it. (Way back in the time of ENT, 'warp drive' was used. I know that's not a popular series around here, but I do accept it as canon and official.)

- My earlier point, that the Bonnie was the first ship which could travel at a sufficiently *high* warp factor (say, Warp 7), is the best thing I could come up with, and had a minimum of guessing involved. Certainly it's just as easy to retcon that TAS line that way, as it would be to claim that there are other FTL methods besides warp drive? :confused:

- When I said I didn't like the Bonnie as TAS showed it, I wasn't talking about the revisions to its design as posted in this thread. Those are actually rather nice. TAS, on the other hand...as I said, the Bonnie just looks too much like the Enterprise. There's really no excuse for that, since even though TAS was the very epitome of early 70's cheese as far as animation goes, it's still animation, and therefore models are irrelevant; they could have come up with something just a *wee* bit more different. (Such as the Ships of the Line version, which would be perfect for the full-out CGI remake of TAS that I have long dreamed of.)

- Yes, I am well aware now that Zefram Cochrane's Bonaventure (the one shown in the Encyclopedia and Keiko's class) is not the same one as from TAS. I almost wish it was, though. It would sure solve a lot of continuity problems: because if we do take that TAS line literally, then the Bonnie must have predated the SS Valiant from WNMHGB, and the TAS version did not look like a ship that would be over 200 years old. I find it hard to believe that Starfleet ship design wasn't supposed to have changed that much, if at all, in two centuries. :p
 
So, I obviously missed where that was tossed out... or else we're not talking about the same ("official") book.

I don't think we are. I was referring to the very un-official multi-volume Federation Spaceflight Chronology by Richard E. Mandel. So far as I know its only available in PDF format. It is probably available elsewhere, but off the top of my head I know you can download it here.

What a terrific source!:techman: Thanks for posting the link - I had never heard of that amazing piece of work before. And I overlooked your post the first time around.:brickwall:

That story for the Bonaventure (detailed in vols 4,5 and 7) seems to me to be the best I have yet seen. And the author is right in his comments, some real-world refits/rebuilds are hardly any less strange.

Cary, what do you think about that concept and how it might influence the details of your version?
 
firstly thanks to EliyahuQeoni for the link it's a very interesting read.
Also a very big thank you to Cary l brown the Bonaventure you've done is much more like what I'd envisioned the predecessor of the tos enterprise to look like and it certainly fit s in better then the 'enterprise' of the enterprise series could ever work. i saw the picture of the tas Bonaventure awhile back and was wondering what it would look like in 3d again thanks
 
Oops, didn't mean to upset anyone. I didn't really have a "point", I just thought people coming into the thread about the Bonaventure would like to have a look at another model. I wasn't saying it was better, or comparing it in any way.

If clarifacation or backstory is needed, Tom is a friend of mine. He's not my best friend, that would be my dog (although now that I think about it, at least Tom has never taken a dump on my carpet), I have a page devoted to his work on my website. Thomas, not my dog. It's here if you are interested. http://www.startrekanimated.com/tas_t7g.html

I actually commisoned the Bonaventure artwork from him. Real American dollars. The image posted is a collage I put together depicting the Delta triangle from the episode Time Trap. If you look closely in the upper corner you will notice the Beatles Yellow submarine I slipped in.

I hope that clears everything up.
 
Okay, then, here is my point:

- I do not believe that the TAS Bonaventure could really be the first ship that ever had warp drive. There's simply too much evidence against it. Claiming that Starfleet used to use a different form of FTL travel is, IMHO, needlessly complicating things, and there's no evidence for it. (Way back in the time of ENT, 'warp drive' was used. I know that's not a popular series around here, but I do accept it as canon and official.)

- My earlier point, that the Bonnie was the first ship which could travel at a sufficiently *high* warp factor (say, Warp 7), is the best thing I could come up with, and had a minimum of guessing involved. Certainly it's just as easy to retcon that TAS line that way, as it would be to claim that there are other FTL methods besides warp drive? :confused:

- When I said I didn't like the Bonnie as TAS showed it, I wasn't talking about the revisions to its design as posted in this thread. Those are actually rather nice. TAS, on the other hand...as I said, the Bonnie just looks too much like the Enterprise. There's really no excuse for that, since even though TAS was the very epitome of early 70's cheese as far as animation goes, it's still animation, and therefore models are irrelevant; they could have come up with something just a *wee* bit more different. (Such as the Ships of the Line version, which would be perfect for the full-out CGI remake of TAS that I have long dreamed of.)

- Yes, I am well aware now that Zefram Cochrane's Bonaventure (the one shown in the Encyclopedia and Keiko's class) is not the same one as from TAS. I almost wish it was, though. It would sure solve a lot of continuity problems: because if we do take that TAS line literally, then the Bonnie must have predated the SS Valiant from WNMHGB, and the TAS version did not look like a ship that would be over 200 years old. I find it hard to believe that Starfleet ship design wasn't supposed to have changed that much, if at all, in two centuries. :p



Well, I'm assuming that when Archer and Tucker toast to Warp 7 in "These Are the Voyages...", Earth and her allies have a goal of at least achieving Warp factor 7.0. The Vulcan starship Sh'Raan could sustain Warp 7, but only for about 12 minutes. I'm guessing that it wasn't until Pike's era that Federation starships could sustain Warp 7.0 (or any higher) for more than brief periods.
 
Okay, then, here is my point:

- I do not believe that the TAS Bonaventure could really be the first ship that ever had warp drive. There's simply too much evidence against it. Claiming that Starfleet used to use a different form of FTL travel is, IMHO, needlessly complicating things, and there's no evidence for it. (Way back in the time of ENT, 'warp drive' was used. I know that's not a popular series around here, but I do accept it as canon and official.)
That's entirely fair... you can accept whatever you like, and anyone else can accept whatever they like. This is, after all, FICTION, right? ;)

As for me, I treat "Enterprise" as being semi-canon... ie, on the same level as TAS. Basically, I view it as history, but history told through a not-quite-perfect method. Basically, it's like when you see a modern film like "300" where the ancient Greeks seem so much like modern people, or a Revolutionary War film where you see lots of modern stuff sneak in... playing HISTORY but with a bit of a "modern slant."

That allows me to accept that "it all happened" but to filter out bits and pieces as being slightly inaccurate tellings... which is how I look at ALL of the contradictory or inconsistent things in Trek. I pretend that there's a REAL "Star Trek" reality out there someplace, and they've repeated tried to "retell" stories that actually happened. Some stories get told very accurately, and other have flaws in the retelling.

Since the 24th-century has pretty much established that people in the Federation associate the wordss "warp drive" and "FTL drive," I have no trouble imagining that they'd just use those terms in their own "contemporary-ized" retellings.

I get it that you think it "needlessly complicates things" but since we've established that there ARE "contradictory" elements in Trek lore, you have three choices:

1) You can throw out the stuff that you don't care about as much and keep the parts you do care about. This will piss off everyone who thinks differently, of course.

2) The other guys can throw out all the stuff that you care about and keep the stuff that you don't care about. This will piss off you, and everyone who feels like you.

OR...

3) You can try to come up with a way of making it all fit together.

Now, you seem to be accusing me of wanting to "throw out Enterprise" (which, if you re-read, you'll notice I never said). Meanwhile, you seem to be perfectly willing to throw out "Where No Man Has Gone Before" and "The Cage/The Menagerie" and "Balance of Terror" and "The Galileo Seven" and so forth.

I say that because each of those episodes, plus a number of other episodes, showed craft which were established as not having warp drive (the BOT Romulan craft, the damaged 1701, the shuttlecraft). There's actual dialog in those episodes confirming that they were operating using impulse.

There's also the bit with Jose Tyler in "The Cage" which CLEARLY indicates a major FTL propulsion breakthrough during the past couple of decades prior to the Talos event.

And there are also the bits in TNG and in DS9 (dunno if they ever did it in Voyager, I seldom watched that show) where they used "static subspace fields" to do EXACTLY what I describe.

In other words... sure, it's "complicated," but it FITS. I've yet to hear of ANY other solution that doesn't involve throwing out large elements of the original Star Trek TV series.

I don't want to throw out "Enterprise." But where it is in overt contradiction with "Star Trek," the original show will always win in my book. You can choose to feel otherwise... that's your business.
- My earlier point, that the Bonnie was the first ship which could travel at a sufficiently *high* warp factor (say, Warp 7), is the best thing I could come up with, and had a minimum of guessing involved. Certainly it's just as easy to retcon that TAS line that way, as it would be to claim that there are other FTL methods besides warp drive? :confused:
"Easier?" If we were ONLY talking about that one episode of TAS, sure... but we're not. The entire Earth/Romulan War was fought, according to "Balance of Terror" with ships without warp drive. Now, imagine for just a moment how ridiculous that statement is... unless there's some other form of FTL travel.

So, again... do we drop something from "Star Trek" or do we drop something from "Enterprise?"

If it comes down to "the new" OVERWRITING "the old," I choose the old every time.

I want my "Balance of Terror" to stand as it was aired. (I also don't want goofy bumpy-foreheaded Romulans... )
- When I said I didn't like the Bonnie as TAS showed it, I wasn't talking about the revisions to its design as posted in this thread. Those are actually rather nice. TAS, on the other hand...as I said, the Bonnie just looks too much like the Enterprise. There's really no excuse for that, since even though TAS was the very epitome of early 70's cheese as far as animation goes, it's still animation, and therefore models are irrelevant; they could have come up with something just a *wee* bit more different. (Such as the Ships of the Line version, which would be perfect for the full-out CGI remake of TAS that I have long dreamed of.)
Fair enough. I also like the SotL ship, though not as the Bonaventure (I see it as being an immediate predecessor to the Constitution-type ships... but I'd LOVE to see that design used!)

I don't think anyone would argue that the ship as shown in TAS was "perfect." Your criticisms of the design as seen on-screen are certainly valid. Hell, that's a bit part of why I started this thread... I also didn't care for it, but instead of the "toss it out" mentality I kept seeing over and over, I wanted to try to treat it according to my above-stated philosophy on these things... that what we were seeing was an "imperfect representation" of some "real" ship that exists in that "real" universe.
- Yes, I am well aware now that Zefram Cochrane's Bonaventure (the one shown in the Encyclopedia and Keiko's class) is not the same one as from TAS. I almost wish it was, though. It would sure solve a lot of continuity problems: because if we do take that TAS line literally, then the Bonnie must have predated the SS Valiant from WNMHGB, and the TAS version did not look like a ship that would be over 200 years old. I find it hard to believe that Starfleet ship design wasn't supposed to have changed that much, if at all, in two centuries. :p
Agreed. I think that the "200 years" bit is the first portion that we'd have to "retcon" out. Why? Well, because that means that we'd need to be launching that ship in about 50 years!

When they did the original series, and the later animated series, they had INTENTIONALLY avoided any mention of when, in time, the show was set. It could have been the 30th century for all we knew (and honestly, given the real pace of progress we're making in those fields... yes, we've got niftier computer technology, but we haven't even gone back to the MOON since the early 1970s... I think that's probably more likely than the 23rd century!)

I'm not sure who first decided that this was in the 23rd century. Was it Franz Joseph??? Was it in some speech Roddenberry gave at a convention? (He was originally very much in favor of NOT pinning it down, but changed his mind over time, so that's not an unreasonable assumption!)

The point is...at the time this episode was written and aired, the timing hadn't been established. So this might have meant that the Bonaventure was launched in the 28th century and TOS was set in the 30th.

Further... the bits with Cochrane make it almost impossible to reconcile the idea of a fully-realized, long-term habitable ship being launched within a couple of years of his first "test flight."

SO... again, we face a matter where we have to CHOOSE which part to keep... because various aspects of Trek lore are contradictory.

In MY case, I've chosen to keep the general timing and to "compress" things a bit. In other words, this ship was developed not centuries but DECADES earlier... and the folks seen on there are first-generation descendents of the original crew, alongside, I'm sure, many of the original crew as well. Say the the Bonaventure was lost 40 years prior to "The Time Trap." The surviving original crewmembers would be between 60 and 90 years old, and you'd have one generation of their ADULT children, plus another generation just entering adulthood... say, between 15 and 19?

Why 40 years? Well... the knowledge of a new technology wherein the "time barrier" was broken became public, and begain to be integrated into functional ship designs, between the time that Vina's ship crashed on Talos and the time that the 1701 found the "survivor's encampment" there. Vina would have been an "adult crewman" and by the time of "the cage" she was in her 50s. So the ship crashed approximately 30 years prior to "The Cage." Assume that the knowledge that "The time barrier" was broken was kept classified for a while (typical for this sort of thing... look at the F-117 "stealth fighter" ... actually a bomber, but hey... in operation for HOW long before it was made "public?")

So, the "time barrier would have been broken at some point between 30 and 50 years prior to "The Cage" and remember that "The Cage" was set thirteen years prior to the first season of "Star Trek." The SHORTEST time between the breakthrough in propulsion to the time that Spock returned Pike to Talos would have been 43 years, and could be as much as 63 years, putting it almost exactly at the turn of the century.

It works, and it requires the loss of none of the "live action" Trek material. You just have to alter one line, and otherwise everything else works.

Far less difficult than retconning every case throughout any series (granted, MAINLY TOS) which showed "impulse-only" craft doing things that would be utterly impossible for a ship operating only at sublight speeds.
 
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^ CB, this is an interesting theory.

I always thought the "time barrier" was some warp factor, like maybe Warp 7, that took the Federation decades to find a way to sustain for more than a few minutes after coming out with the first Warp 7 engine. ("These Are the Voyages...") So the first Federation starships in the late 22nd century could be considered Warp 7 ships, but they weren't necessarily any faster or better than the Vulcan ships in ENT.

That's just another possible explanation; I had been tossing that one around for at least 25 years, FWIW.
 
A quick request...

I have two topics I want to breach here, and I'd like to ask for help and/or input from you guys.

First... it was suggested that I might want to do a "side by side" render... this ship right next to the 1701. Unfortunately, I've never made my own model of the 1701, and surprisingly, there are no good versions on the 'net that I've been able to find. I've asked friends on here if they have one I can use, but so far no one has had a model I can just pull in and work from (say, a 3DSMax or Lightwave format, or something "neutral") but also something pretty nice-looking and accurate.

I know that such models EXIST. But they're awfully hard to come by. I have access to a rather nice translation package, so if you have something that's in a common format, or can export to a common format, I can use that, I'm sure.

So... anyone able to help???

SECONDLY...

I mentioned that I was thinking about some of the further detailing, and that I was seriously considering how to put weapons (and other external detailing) on her.

At this point, I'd like to ask for serious suggestions as to how to go. Exposed turrets for laser canon? TOS style details on the inside of the nacelles? Aridas-style details on TOP of the nacelles? Flashy lights per TOS, per WNMHGB, or none at all (per "the cage?"), or something else? Any additional markings? Exposed hatches?

I'm soliciting your THOUGHTS... both aesthetic and technical in nature... as to what you, personally, would do to "dress up" the model. The main things that I've decided, though, are:

1) No exposed hardware or plumbing, ala "Star Wars" on the hull exterior. Anything that IS on the exterior needs to be able to be brought inside for servicing (either by just retracting or by being detached and brought in through the hangar doors)

2) Nothing that's there JUST to "look cool." In other words, say something like "I think that there should be docking hatches here and here, and they should be five-sided like in TMP, because (insert reasoning here)..." Don't say "I think it needs some color variations to make it look kewl, though. If you've got a sound reason, I'm interested... if it's PURELY COSMETIC, I'll probably ignore it... and hey, it IS my project. ;)

Basically, I've been worrying that I might be straying TOO close to TOS in terms of "dressing up" but I keep drifting back in that direction. SO... instead of asking for NEGATIVE comments, I'm asking for POSITIVE ones (not praise, but INPUT). And I'm anxious to hear 'em!
 
Since the 24th-century has pretty much established that people in the Federation associate the wordss "warp drive" and "FTL drive,"

And I don't see any evidence that those terms were anything other than synonymous. Assuming that they were not, well, that's practically begging for Occam's Razor, innit?

You can try to come up with a way of making it all fit together.

That's all I ever tried to do.

Now, you seem to be accusing me of wanting to "throw out Enterprise" (which, if you re-read, you'll notice I never said). Meanwhile, you seem to be perfectly willing to throw out "Where No Man Has Gone Before" and "The Cage/The Menagerie" and "Balance of Terror" and "The Galileo Seven" and so forth.

I say that because each of those episodes, plus a number of other episodes, showed craft which were established as not having warp drive (the BOT Romulan craft, the damaged 1701, the shuttlecraft). There's actual dialog in those episodes confirming that they were operating using impulse.

Such as? When did they ever specifically say that there was no warp drive in those episodes?

"Balance of Terror" doesn't count. 'Their power is simple impulse'? Obviously Scotty doesn't know as much about Romulan engines as he does about Starfleet ones. In my view, any ship travelling FTL is travelling at warp. I choose to interpret that line as Scotty not recognizing Romulan warp drives (which, as we would later learn on TNG, operate with artificial quantum singularities). Since obviously you couldn't have the Earth-Romulan War when one side has warp drive and the other does not...then, logically, the Romulans had *some* form of warp drive. Scotty just didn't see it.

He isn't perfect, you know. ;)

There's also the bit with Jose Tyler in "The Cage" which CLEARLY indicates a major FTL propulsion breakthrough during the past couple of decades prior to the Talos event.

That was way back in the pilot episode. They hadn't really decided on anything at all, that early in the game. And even so, "the time barrier has been broken" could mean anything.

And there are also the bits in TNG and in DS9 (dunno if they ever did it in Voyager, I seldom watched that show) where they used "static subspace fields" to do EXACTLY what I describe.

More specifics, please. Also, why are such subspace fields not warp drive?

My earlier point, that the Bonnie was the first ship which could travel at a sufficiently *high* warp factor (say, Warp 7), is the best thing I could come up with, and had a minimum of guessing involved. Certainly it's just as easy to retcon that TAS line that way, as it would be to claim that there are other FTL methods besides warp drive? :confused:
"Easier?" If we were ONLY talking about that one episode of TAS, sure... but we're not. The entire Earth/Romulan War was fought, according to "Balance of Terror" with ships without warp drive.

See above.

As I said, there is no overt evidence that "warp drive" and "faster than light" are anything other than absolutely equivalent. If you can show me something different - i.e. a spacecraft travelling at FTL speeds, and a character pointing out *specifically* that they *are not* using warp drive - I'd love to hear it.


Agreed. I think that the "200 years" bit is the first portion that we'd have to "retcon" out. Why? Well, because that means that we'd need to be launching that ship in about 50 years!

They already had the DY-100 series (such as the Botany Bay), which was launched 12 years ago (from now)...so obviously the Trekverse was more advanced than ours at the same points in history.

I'm not sure who first decided that this was in the 23rd century.

The earliest reference I can find is TMP, where Voyager VI was said to have been launched over 300 years ago. And then the next film began with: "In the 23rd century..."
 
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