Maybe, but the same couldn't be said of the Klingon Bird of Prey... I've seen analysis of that that suggest as many as three different sizes for the Bounty just in The Voyage Home.
But were there three different Bountys in that movie?
Maybe, but the same couldn't be said of the Klingon Bird of Prey... I've seen analysis of that that suggest as many as three different sizes for the Bounty just in The Voyage Home.
Could a secondary goal of Project Galaxy have been to create a multi-role cruiser....to replace the Excelsior class?
Excelsior NCC-42037
Was this vessel's name not seen on some fleet charts in TNG? If so, it could have been a regular Excelsior or an Enterprise-B style update.
I'm not a fan of the current use of just putting a roman-numeral "II" after a class name and then making a new class that resembles the old one. I think this is being done for offscreen reasons to keep it simple for fans and let the audience feel familiarity by knowing ships are supposed to resemble their older counterparts. I frankly don't consider it canon for that reason. If there had not been a long break, onscreen and offscreen, in new content under the Star Trek name, this would probably not have happened.
(In Star Wars, an X-wing is an X-wing, no matter how new.)
The infamous “Starship Deploy Status” chart that was barely readable in TNG “Measure of a Man” had a USS Excelsior listed. Its registry number was illegible, but it didn’t look like ‘42037’ (MA has it listed as 27445.) The chart isn’t really proof of anything as some of its info was contradicted later (the Saratoga’s registry, for example, was different on the chart than on the later model used in ‘Emissary’) and illegible background displays can always be taken with a grain of salt.
Not only that, but I’m also not a fan of making those ‘II’ or ‘III’ ships resemble the former ships with that class name.
1. 42037 is some personal number of importance like birthday or something like that.
2. The number of 42037 is meant to retroactively tell us we should imagine many Excelsiors in TNG and DS9 as having details like those on the Galaxy or Sovereign, especially those with numbers in the 42000's.
I sort-of understand the value of option 2, in that it could suggest refits that are as substantial as the one in TMP could keep these ships in service longer. In my view, it would really just be better than that just to imagine TNG and DS9 as having more Centaurs and Nebulas where Mirandas are shown, and more Ambassadors and the (possibly unseen) Galaxy-family cruiser where Excelsiors are shown. It would even do in later seasons logically to see more Akiras and Intrepids for the same reason.
The refit Constitution is the Constitution II now, rather than Enterprise-class, or just Constitution like the various refits of the Essex-class aircraft carriers became to history. So could some of the Excelsior IIs have been extreme refits of old starships as well as new construction, like the new USS Excelsior herself, since Sulu's ship was obviously retired and but in the museum? Back in the 2340s maybe. To supplement the Ambassadors with more than just internal refits of Excelsiors. Or to throw something in the Cardassians faces.
The refit Constitution is the Constitution II now, rather than Enterprise-class, or just Constitution
Sorry, to me that smacks of the whole 'we can no longer trust our own eyes' mentality so prevalent these days with DSC and SNW. I saw Excelsiors that look just like the one I saw in TSFS, and I have no reason to believe they were anything else other than what I saw on screen.
I said I thought they were trying to tell us what they would like us to imagine, not that I necessarily support that. It could work some cases, but that would require asking more questions about scale and detail that would call to question many items in the written sources, like the Encyclopedia entries based on the charts created for being used onscreen, for example. I would prefer the 27000's number instead of the 42000's for this case, for example.
Personally, I think that that the Excelsior IIs were a heavily updated Excelsiors that were rebuilt in the aftermath of the destruction of Utopia Planitia to supplement the fleet numbers without making new ships. I am assuming that there are political fighting between the Federation Council bean counters and Starfleet. It was just a way for Starfleet to get new(ish) ships during a time of post-War downsizing and a major crisis.
Personally, I think that that the Excelsior IIs were a heavily updated Excelsiors that were rebuilt in the aftermath of the destruction of Utopia Planitia to supplement the fleet numbers without making new ships. I am assuming that there are political fighting between the Federation Council bean counters and Starfleet. It was just a way for Starfleet to get new(ish) ships during a time of post-War downsizing and a major crisis.
It's not outlandish, given the Titan in PIC S3. It's a "refit" of the Luna-Class Titan, although in reality it's an entirely new design.
WHY they do this, rather than just build a new ship is not clear, but it at least seem to happen. Perhaps there are enough rare/unreplicatable components that are still useful in the old ships that they are considered "refits", even though they've been really been rebuilt from the keel up.
Although PIC was weird with its terminology. The Stargazer was said to be a "refit", even though it also definitely was not a refit and was definitely a new ship.
(I've long held a theory that the Khitomer Accords put a limit on how many ships the powers could have/build, so if Starfleet was in a situation where want to upgrade/expand the fleet, but they were already building too many hulls, they would just go full-on rebuild of existing ships, with legally satisfied treaty stipulations. Even if they mothballed an old ship, they still couldn't build a new one because they were already building the max. Treaty has no embargo on upgrading old ships, so they get creative.)
....supplement the fleet numbers without making new ships. I am assuming that there are political fighting between the Federation Council bean counters and Starfleet. It was just a way for Starfleet to get new(ish) ships during a time of post-War downsizing and a major crisis.
It's not outlandish, given the Titan in PIC S3. It's a "refit" of the Luna-Class Titan, although in reality it's an entirely new design.
WHY they do this, rather than just build a new ship is not clear, but it at least seem to happen. Perhaps there are enough rare/unreplicatable components that are still useful in the old ships that they are considered "refits", even though they've been really been rebuilt from the keel up.
Although PIC was weird with its terminology. The Stargazer was said to be a "refit", even though it also definitely was not a refit and was definitely a new ship.
(I've long held a theory that the Khitomer Accords put a limit on how many ships the powers could have/build, so if Starfleet was in a situation where want to upgrade/expand the fleet, but they were already building too many hulls, they would just go full-on rebuild of existing ships, with legally satisfied treaty stipulations. Even if they mothballed an old ship, they still couldn't build a new one because they were already building the max. Treaty has no embargo on upgrading old ships, so they get creative.)
Those Picard quotes never made sense. They completely misused the word refit.
(a theory that the Khitomer Accords put a limit on how many ships the powers could have/build, so if Starfleet was in a situation where want to upgrade/expand the fleet
perhaps surviving sections from different ships could be thrown together to create a few Curry/Raging Queen types.
Those Picard quotes never made sense. They completely misused the word refit.
One novel suggests that regarding Khtiomer and the new accords, the newer Excelsiors can only be built alongside the decommissioning of other older ships. Avoiding spoilers, I'll say that by the end of the book this was not necessarily going to be strictly followed. But basically this is the opposite theory of what you suggest, and Starfleet after Star Trek 6 was going to need to make more new ships if they wanted to expand in the novel.
The Excelsior class and all its related ships would be new, so that fits.
This leaves the Miranda class as a ship that oddly seems to have existed perhaps a long time before the battle at Khitomer and yet is still in service in DS9.
I could see the Curry being a cargo ship, I am not sure why it would use nacelles of the TMP design, but I don't see the idea of it as a full-size in-universe kit bash during the war as a viable option. If it had Galaxy-style nacelles or "pen-style" nacelles I could envision that it was a ship that had attributes of both the Excelsior era and the time between the movies and TNG.
While writing this post, it occurs to me that perhaps the Curry and the ships like it are all TMP era tech inside the engines, even internally, and simply uses Excelsior hull components to have a bigger cargo area. Why you would develop a cargo ship in this way is still hard to figure out. Are there any real-world examples of older-style engines being put into a warship hull to create a military cargo ship?
Why not use Galaxy-style nacelles (for an effect similar to the Niagara-class), Intrepid-style nacelles, or even the pen-style nacelles, to imply the ship got an engine upgrade during its refitting process?
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