Williams picked up one of the tablets and took a look at it, skimming through a few screens. There were starship schematics on it: a saucer-shaped ship with an integrated cylindrical section running through the center; a vessel with a spherical main hull like the Daedalus class but with three nacelles; a Columbia-type saucer squared off in back with a small secondary module above and nacelles mounted below. “These look like Earth designs,”she said. “But I don’t recognize them.”
“That’s . . . because they don’t exist yet. They’re just concepts.”
“I thought the plan was to integrate the fleets eventually,” Grev said. “For new designs to incorporate the best from every species’ tech—like a continuation of what your team is doing here.”
“That’s what Commodore Jefferies wants,” he said. “But . . . I think the best thing Earth contributes is the overall shape and structure of their ships.”
“What do you mean?” Williams asked.
Talking about engineering was clearly the right way to get Dax to open up. “Well, Vulcan and Andorian ships are . . . they’re great if you want a combat vessel. Their hulls are long and thin—minimizes the forward profile you present to an enemy. Makes you a harder target to hit. But Earth ships, with your spherical or lenticular hulls, have a more efficient internal arrangement. It’s easier to get personnel or resources from one part of the ship to another. It’s better for a multipurpose ship, or a science ship where you need smooth communication between departments, not so much a top-down organization.
“And the engines, too—Vulcan ring drives are powerful and efficient, but not as easy to adjust in flight as Cochrane-style outrigger nacelles. Again, not as good for flexible mission profiles. And Andorian inboard nacelles are well-shielded, good for combat, but there’s a trade-off in longevity and power consumption. Not so great for long-term or open-ended missions like deep space exploration.”
“What about Tellarite ships?” Grev asked. Dax just stared, as did Williams. The Tellarites had never been much for starship engineering, preferring to buy their ships from outside contractors. “Okay, just trying to do my part.”
Williams frowned. “But Doctor, why are you assuming that these science ships or multipurpose ships are Starfleet’s future? Surely we’ve learned that we need a strong combat fleet. If the Deneva Conference goes the way it’s looking, that’s going to be proved yet again.”
Dax looked down at his salad. “I do have colleagues who favor that thinking. They’re pushing for a unified fleet design that’s closer to Vulcan or Andorian.” The Trill shrugged. “But I think it’s better to be . . . able to change identity as you need to, not stuck with just one. Your Earth ships adapted pretty well to combat when they had to. But they can run rings around everyone else when it comes to exploring.
“Don’t misunderstand—there’s certainly room for improvement. I think getting the different species’ technologies to work together is just the first step. Once you’ve all pooled your understanding, combined the best of all your stuff, it’ll synergize, and Starfleet ships will get even better.” He tilted his head. “But I think that from the outside, at least, they’ll still look basically like Earth ships.”
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