I haven't bothered to check Memory Alpha, as I don't think there's an entry on the Abrams Enterprise. Anyone know? If it hasn't been identified, how many of you would like it if it were called Enterprise-class?
The dossier at the official site says "Constitution Class heavy cruiser" (the Memory Alpha entry agrees with this) while the ship's dedication plaque reads "Starship Class", same as the one on the original TOS bridge.I haven't bothered to check Memory Alpha, as I don't think there's an entry on the Abrams Enterprise. Anyone know? If it hasn't been identified, how many of you would like it if it were called Enterprise-class?
The Abramsverse Enterprise is still Constitution-class. And Memory Alpha does have an entry on the ship.
"Constitution class" is a name, nothing more. It could be assigned to a freighter, a science vessel, a warship or anything else. Size has nothing to do with it.
In the prime universe, the name Enterprise could have been given to a 23rd century version of a smaller Intrepid-class ship, rather than a large Galaxy-class equivalent. Since we only ever saw one type of TOS-era ship, who's to say bigger ones didn't exist, unseen until now?
^What I'm suggesting is that there may have been larger ship types than the TOS Constitution class that co-existed with it, the way the Galaxy and Intrepid classes co-exist in the 24th century.
The Constitution-class in STXI clearly isn't the same Constitution-class from TOS. They share a name, as does the STXI Enterprise with the TOS one. It's the product of a timeline that diverged many years prior to the first Connies in TOS appearing. You wouldn't say "they're both Constitution class ships", you'd say "they're two universe's alternate versions of Constitution-class ships" (if it is meant to be Constitution-class. There's nothing mentioned about the ship in the movie beyond the name "Enterprise" and that it's "our newest flagship")
YARN said:No disrespect, but this seems too much like wild speculation
YARN said:No disrespect, but this seems too much like wild speculation
It's more of a retcon. 2233's USS Kelvin was larger than the TOS Enterprise (457m vs. 285m) and had a bigger crew (at least 800 vs. 430). 25 years later in the alternate universe, the fleet that left for Vulcan were all made of the same components as the Kelvin, with the exception of the brand-new Enterprise.
I think it's likely all these Kelvin kitbash ships are from or were designed in the same era as the Kelvin (in the same way the Consitution refit/Miranda/Constellation classes all are all roughly concurrent, as are the Galaxy and Nebula classes) and thus it's very probable that these older ships that pre-date the timeline split would still be in service later in both universes. Star Trek's always kept old ship designs in use for ages.
^ I think the designation is clear in both universes. In the prime universe, a 300 m ship class was named Constitution; in the alternate reality, that name was given to a 700 m ship class.
(By the way, class in naval language refers to design, not type. There might be dozens of ship classes of similar size, mass, and general shape, each representing a different design.)
^ I think the designation is clear in both universes. In the prime universe, a 300 m ship class was named Constitution; in the alternate reality, that name was given to a 700 m ship class.
Right. In one universe there is an Enterprise and in another there is a Nu-Enterprise. Similarly, in one universe there is a Constitution class and in another there is a Nu-Constitution class. My point is to emphasize that the fact that the classes have the same name should not mislead us into thinking that there we should have a standing expectation for other similarities.
I meant naval type (e.g. heavy cruiser, destroyer, 44-gun frigate, etc.), which is probably why my point was unclear - and why it seemed like hairsplitting. You're right that class is itself a form of type, but in naval jargon, the two terms are notably separate.(By the way, class in naval language refers to design, not type. There might be dozens of ship classes of similar size, mass, and general shape, each representing a different design.)
Your usage here is somewhat puzzling. First you say, class refers to design (not type), but then you say that ships may share the same class without sharing the same design (in which case it would seem that class does not refer to design).
Even if we can make your meaning clear, your point seems to be hairsplitting. To have a shared design is to be of the same type in regard to that aspect. I might say that a Mustang is a type of car and still acknowledge that they come with various engine packages and other options.
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