So ... I understand why in the Prime Universe the successor USS Enterprise got an NCC-1701-A designation. It'd been the center of a major controversy, a cadre of its officers had just saved the Earth from an extinction-level event, and they apparently had a duplicate to spare and kind-of ready-ish to go. Fine enough.
But why in the Kelvin Universe? I understand wanting to build a new Enterprise, and keeping at least some of the core staff together for it, sure. And building one that's close to the original again makes sense. But what's the in-universe reason for preserving the NCC number?
I can get behind preserving a number in honor of a ship (or crew) that's performed extraordinary service. While the Kelvin Enterprise's crew did an extraordinary job in stopping a fearsome peril, the peril doesn't seem so immediate or intense or urgent as the Prime Universe had. Yes, it'd have been horrible to lose the Starbase Yorktown and whatever other Federation assets were nearby, but that's not like literally saving the life of everyone on Earth. (Which, admittedly, this crew and ship had done, but like six years before.) It's hard to see, given what we know of that era of the Star Trek universe, that every ship hasn't done at least as much. So why get a fixed registry number?
Perhaps I should frame the discussion by saying I'm fond of numbering scheme anomalies. They're surprisingly common in the real world. It's hard to see what role registry numbers serve that isn't satisfied by weird numbering schemes full of exceptions. If I'm fine with Apollo Command and Service Module number 115A --- and I am --- I'm also fine with suffixed (and prefixed) letters to the NCC numbers. I'm just wondering why this ship rated this anomaly at this time.
But why in the Kelvin Universe? I understand wanting to build a new Enterprise, and keeping at least some of the core staff together for it, sure. And building one that's close to the original again makes sense. But what's the in-universe reason for preserving the NCC number?
I can get behind preserving a number in honor of a ship (or crew) that's performed extraordinary service. While the Kelvin Enterprise's crew did an extraordinary job in stopping a fearsome peril, the peril doesn't seem so immediate or intense or urgent as the Prime Universe had. Yes, it'd have been horrible to lose the Starbase Yorktown and whatever other Federation assets were nearby, but that's not like literally saving the life of everyone on Earth. (Which, admittedly, this crew and ship had done, but like six years before.) It's hard to see, given what we know of that era of the Star Trek universe, that every ship hasn't done at least as much. So why get a fixed registry number?
Perhaps I should frame the discussion by saying I'm fond of numbering scheme anomalies. They're surprisingly common in the real world. It's hard to see what role registry numbers serve that isn't satisfied by weird numbering schemes full of exceptions. If I'm fine with Apollo Command and Service Module number 115A --- and I am --- I'm also fine with suffixed (and prefixed) letters to the NCC numbers. I'm just wondering why this ship rated this anomaly at this time.