Have to wonder if something like this appeared in the war.
A model was built, but it looks as though it (thankfully) never made it to screen.
Have to wonder if something like this appeared in the war.
The EarthForce Omega-class ships are officially "destroyers", which the production team have admitted is just because they thought it sounded tough and intimidating and they knew nothing of traditional naval designations; it's really more of a dreadnought.
The White Star would be a better fit for destroyer as the term is usually meant.
And within a decade three of the initial batch were lost. (Yes, I know that the Enterprise D was salvaged). Instead of building the War Galaxies, I would have used the stored parts to throw together some Nebulas.
I would counter that the Nebula-class came first and the Galaxy are just a stretched Nebula. Nebula-class starships were used enough against the Cardassians that Gul Macet knew their capabilities against his own fleet. We have only seen Galaxy-class starships do within the border missions with rare exceptions. Yamato and the Enterprise were lost in and around known space. The Odyssey was sent as a don't-mess-with-the-Federation mission (it was a military mission).A Nebula is just a nerfed Galaxy though. There are many examples of the Galaxy-class distinguishing itself during the Dominion War, and we don't see a single one being lost; the Nebula seems to be very average in comparison, and off the top of my head we see at least two getting destroyed.
So ended up being used as one. There may have been a need for such. If the Federation kept expanding, there may have been a tendency for established star bases to be left far behind.It was a small warp capable starbase.
I would counter that the Nebula-class came first and the Galaxy are just a stretched Nebula.
We don't know Nebulas came first, and it seems likely to me that even if they were built first the Galaxy was designed first as the "family archetype" from which derived ships descended.
Actually, I believe the opposite is true. Based on registry numbers, I believe ships like the New Orleans, Challenger, Cheyenne, Springfield, Olympic and Nebula classes came first, and the Galaxy class was the last ship to incorporate the design elements of those older classes.
While the USS Melbourne study model was built to the same scale as the Galaxy class, the actual filming model of the Nebula class Phoenix that it was based on was supposed to be a smaller ship, scaled like the rest of the BoBW kitbashes. But the budget only allowed for the Enterprise-D molds to be used for it.
Like I said – the Galaxy-class was designed first as the pinnacle of the next technological generation of ships, but all those ships that have obvious design similarities with the Galaxy while being smaller were part of the development process to test specific features or manufacturing techniques before the final construction of the Galaxy-class brought all of those new technologies together in one place. This would explain why the Galaxy-class seems to have had such a long build time.
That's very interesting, I'd never heard that the Nebula was originally supposed to be smaller (New Orleans-sized, perhaps?), though that would certainly explain why the Nebula saucer seems to be missing a lot of windows compared to the Galaxy. I always felt the Nebula scaled to the same size as the Galaxy was too bulky to be a sort of "Galaxy-fied Miranda". Then again a Nebula is about 75% the volume of a Galaxy and a Miranda is about 93% the size of a Constitution II so...![]()
As Michael Okuda explained on Doug Drexler's blog, "The original concept for the Nebula-class ship was to develop a design that was in the style that Andy Probert had so brilliantly established for the Enterprise-D. (You may recall that every other Federation starship in early TNG episodes was made with recycled movie ships.) Our initial hope was that Greg could use the same molds from the 4' Enterprise-D, but that he could add a bigger bridge and give it bigger windows. The idea was to suggest that this ship was a contemporary of the E-D, but it was a smaller vessel.
Okuda elaborated further: "As so often happens with this kind of project, we didn't give Greg enough time to accomplish this, so we decided to retain the original scale of the Galaxy-class ship saucer. I suggested the original 'AWACS' pod in response to a producer's observation that the ship might otherwise appear unbalanced. Unfortunately, the AWACS pod didn't look as elegant as we had hoped in "The Wounded". Rick Sternbach came to the rescue with the cool triangular pod that we used in later episodes."
If the Nebula was supposed to be considerably smaller than the Galaxy design....
Could a secondary goal of Project Galaxy have been to create a multi-role cruiser....to replace the Excelsior class?
(BTW, I hate those designs. The Obena is just sloppy and lazy, and the Excelsior II is an unnecessary tribute.)
One can imagine Starfleet slapping in a second warp core into a partly built Galaxy-class starship with room to spare. Not for more warp speed, but for more power for weapons and shields. Might have even been part of the design lineage for the Ross-class, by having the extra core in the saucer section.
Given the relatively lower registry number on the Excelsior IIs, I can imagine them having been built a while ago as an enlarged Excelsior and since modified to look how the do in the 25th century. That would fit with some of the incorrectly scaled Excelsiors we saw in TNG and DS9, since several of those were also in the 42000s hull numbers.
I mean, it's not like when the Defiant magically changed scale depending on which episode it was in, that it was actually a different Defiant.
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