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Why was the Defiant class not mass produced?

This is cute, this is very cute.

When I point to a registry seen on screen that could be taken to prove that registries don't always go chronologically, you handwave it away. "Well, mistakes happen. It's fine."

What-should I ignore Okuda?

Wait... what? I was talking about the fleet vs. the defense platforms in "Tears of the Prophets," not FC. :vulcan:

..er...OH.

You don't know the Akira was undamaged.
We know there was no hull damage.

"other inferior Federation ship" is Defiant? Now the Defiant is inferior again?

No, other ships like other Excelsiors and Mirandas and Ambassadors. The Lakota Refit was designed to give a few Captains a considerable edge against the standard Federation ship.

No, it wasn't refit for that purpose, it was refit in case of a Dominion invasion. Leyton & co. may have secretly also intended for it to be used that way, but the refit itself wasn't hidden.

You know there was no real invasion right?

:cardie:
Uh... no. I didn't "speculate" anything. I pointed out that after the defense satellites went down, there were a bunch of ships still flying along with the Defiant, so clearly they were all tough enough to survive.

That's speculation.
All that we can properly infer (clearly as you say) is that they survived. They could be just as tough as Defiant or there were simply too many ships for the defense Satelites to target. Nothing conclusive.

You said in your previous post that the Akira/Saber/Steamrunner sucked because they DIDN'T have any substantial forward-facing offense!

And?
What's you point, don't leave me hanging.

:vulcan:
Twenty-eight... Not even close. We only see the ship fire from six (SIX) different locations during the "Paradise Lost" battle.

Trust me it's 28
We do see other "points" on the saucer that look exactly like the points we see actually fire; there is no doubt these are also phaser emitters. There are ten of those total (five dorsal, five ventral), plus one on the belly, one on each side of the impulse engines, one above the impulse engines, and one between the nacelles. 15 total on-screen. Everything else is speculation on your part.

No you don't know you banks from your emitters. Lets do a little research.

Memory Alpha.
Each bank contained one or more phaser emitters from which the beam energy was actually released but which shared common power sources and targeting systems.

There are 28 emitters or turrets. Only one of the 28 is speculative (for symmetry)The rest are canon in evey way.You have to say turret or emitter because of poor lighting or lack of feature on the hull we can't say there is more than one turret on the banks on the side of the neck.This is why they ship was regarded as a Battleship in FASA.


This is getting ridiculous. You say I'm making leaps of faith, yet declare that "Paradise Lost" somehow proves twenty-eight phaser banks (or "emitters"..

Model and on screen evidence is definitely canon.
No leaps required.


on the Excelsior. You hand-wave away on-screen evidence of out-of-order registry numbers as meaningless,

That's what Okuda said. You haven't given any better examples.

yet declare that the Steamrunner is the first Starfleet ship in history with no torpedo launchers because we can't see them

Oberth too.

And you still refuse to acknowledge that you are speculating. A lot more than you want to admit.

That's not true...
SaQ said:I speculate with similar logic that these were last ditch vessels.

But there is a difference between speculation through reason and random conjecture. We just can't assume those ships were just as tough when we clearly see an Akira getting ripped a new one and then another. Defiant takes numerous direct hits over and over and over again.
 
^ The Excelsior appeared in just as many fleet battles as the Akira and has been shown firing in more of them than the Akira but we never saw it open up with all of its apparent 28 phaser banks, so by the logic you apply to the Akira the Excelsior should only have around 8.

Officially we see Excelsior's firing from the edge of their saucer. The lower forward bank, the port bow bank, the starboard bow bank. In Paradise Lost we see Lakota use it's belly Turrets and two more we didn't know it had. That's 7, just as many as the Galaxy, and the Intrepid has been seen using.

Logically we shouldn't expect to see them all used at any one time but they do give us a reasonable demonstration that their emitters or arrays are legit. Now we're not talking phasers we're talking torpedo tubes. We' see 3 tubes fired out 16...That's no where the same.



Plus what are you basing the Akira being sad and pathetic on? The only time we've seen Akiras getting destroyed is against the Borg, who hand everyone their arse, and the Cardassian Weapons platforms, which were very well armed.

If this is supposed to be a new modern warship it's really sucking compared to Defiant which would be the OLDER ship built in 2366 Where as Akira and the others show up in 2373. Taking out the Pylon blows the Akira sky high in FC. Sabers were being taken out in one shot death blossoms and these ships are supposed to be hundreds of meters long. And here is 120 meter defiant taking the same punishment in FC with no shields and still whole.

They were canon fodder.
 
Welp, I'm done on most of these points. This remains a subject that I love discussing (starship minutiae), but the stuff about the Akira/Saber/Steamrunner, power levels of ships, what we did or didn't see on screen/as canon, etc... "debating" with someone who refuses to admit that he's speculating and theorizing just as much as the rest of us (actually, more in many cases) and makes leaps of faith and assumptions and then tries to pass them off as canon (while accusing me of doing the same repeatedly) is not that much fun.

I will just clarify one thing: I'm not "mixing up" anything with regards to phaser arrays vs. banks vs. emitters (you're the one who started out saying that the Excelsior has 16+ "arrays", ignored my post on the difference between arrays and banks, and has since used "emitter" and "turret" interchangeably, not to mention that "turret" isn't even part of the Trek vernacular for phasers). All I was trying to say on this point is that visually inspecting the Excelsior model and watching the "Paradise Lost" battle does not demonstrate anywhere NEAR twenty-eight distinct points on the external hull that are absolutely - without speculation - points from which phasers can fire.
 
Sabers were being taken out in one shot death blossoms and these ships are supposed to be hundreds of meters long. And here is 120 meter defiant taking the same punishment in FC with no shields and still whole.

Err.... no.

From Visual Effects Supervisor David Stipes:

Stipes Google Groups said:
Chris wrote:
> Well, I am looking for some ship size info.. I know that the Enterprise is
> about (or exactly) 641m long, and the Borg ship is about 3 times that at
> 2000m (all dimentions).. I'd really like to know how USS Voyager, USS
> Defiant and the two known Jem Ha'dar ship classes (the fighter and the
> battleship) compare to those sizes. I would imagine that all of the latter
> are smaller then the Enterprise however the Jem Hadar battleship could come
> close? Any info on that at all?

> Trypt



Akira = 860'
Sabre = 625'
Steamrunner = 800'
Vor'Cha = 1500'
Neg'Var = 2250'
Jem Hadar Battle Cruiser = 2500'
Jem Hadar "Bug" Fighter = 500'
Cardassian "Hediki" Fighter = 500'
Voyager = 1200' to 1250'
Defiant = 560'
Small Bord of Prey = 360'
Martok's Bird of Prey = 450'
Runabouts = 65'
DS-9 Station = 5280'
Reliant (Merada Class) = 500' to 560'
Some fans may argue these sizes with me...but these ARE what we use on
the Trek shows. You may get some variation in an episode in order to
satisfy a particular story point.

David Stipes, Visual Effects Supervisor, DS-9

Note that the difference between Defiant and Sabre classes is 65 feet - or very minimal.
 
^ The Excelsior appeared in just as many fleet battles as the Akira and has been shown firing in more of them than the Akira but we never saw it open up with all of its apparent 28 phaser banks, so by the logic you apply to the Akira the Excelsior should only have around 8.

Officially we see Excelsior's firing from the edge of their saucer. The lower forward bank, the port bow bank, the starboard bow bank. In Paradise Lost we see Lakota use it's belly Turrets and two more we didn't know it had. That's 7, just as many as the Galaxy, and the Intrepid has been seen using.

Logically we shouldn't expect to see them all used at any one time but they do give us a reasonable demonstration that their emitters or arrays are legit. Now we're not talking phasers we're talking torpedo tubes. We' see 3 tubes fired out 16...That's no where the same.

"No where the same"? Nonsense. Your argument about the Excelsiors weapons and the one that says the Akira has 15 torpedo launchers are based on the same thing - inspection of the model, not on screen evidence of all the weapons firing.

Wait a minute, I just noticed this in your post above the one with replies to my post:

Model and on screen evidence is definitely canon.
So by your own system the Akira has 15+ torpedo launchers, it's "canon". It makes it even lese "no where the same" than before.

Plus what are you basing the Akira being sad and pathetic on? The only time we've seen Akiras getting destroyed is against the Borg, who hand everyone their arse, and the Cardassian Weapons platforms, which were very well armed.
If this is supposed to be a new modern warship it's really sucking compared to Defiant which would be the OLDER ship built in 2366 Where as Akira and the others show up in 2373.
Two pages back you denounced the Akira as a relic from the early 24th century, now it's super-modern?

<Insert registries argument>

Taking out the Pylon blows the Akira sky high in FC.
If only it did. Watch the scene again. The Borg beam sweeps across the Akira and destroys it. So apparently the Akira doesn't like Borg beams tearing it to shred from stern to bow...how pathetic. :rolleyes:

Sabers were being taken out in one shot death blossoms and these ships are supposed to be hundreds of meters long. And here is 120 meter defiant taking the same punishment in FC with no shields and still whole.
The point about hero ships have been brought up multiple times before and you've made it clear you're not interested in it, so I won't bother rehashing it.
 
My own take is that by itself, Defiant-class ships were meant to work in a squadron (i.e., a squadron of Defiant-class ships working in concert) to take down a superior force. But by itself, a single Defiant-class ship isn't some kind of "invincible uber ship," just one better optimized for combat for a ship its size.

Agreed. You could almost say the Defiant is the federation answer to the Klingon bird of prey...just better. Birds of Prey operated in squadrons on DS9.

I think it would have been sweet to see a half dozen Defiant-class ships flying in a delta formation!
 
but the stuff about the Akira/Saber/Steamrunner, power levels of ships, what we did or didn't see on screen/as canon, etc... "debating" with someone who refuses to admit that he's speculating and theorizing just as much as the rest of us (actually, more in many cases) and makes leaps of faith and assumptions and then tries to pass them off as canon (while accusing me of doing the same repeatedly) is not that much fun.

I've given you all the lee-way I can.
Your refusal to accept the canon model as evidence and "Paradise Lost" along with reasonable speculation becomes an issue of interpretation. I have a somewhat high standard for evidence and logic that you simply couldn't grasp in this issue.


I will just clarify one thing: I'm not "mixing up" anything with regards to phaser arrays vs. banks vs. emitters (you're the one who started out saying that the Excelsior has 16+ "arrays",
You're mixing up everything and you're in complete retrograde. I EXPLICITLY layout a correction to that post and you're ignoring it. You're ignoring quite a few things. And at this point I'm thinking you saw you were wrong and somehow you're having a problem making the admission.

All I was trying to say on this point is that visually inspecting the Excelsior model and watching the "Paradise Lost" battle does not demonstrate anywhere NEAR twenty-eight distinct points on the external hull that are absolutely - without speculation - points from which phasers can fire.
And you're wrong.



Now I've done my due diligence of visually proving my case of 28 phasers. If you still don't agree that these are phasers despite that their canon then I don't know how to tell you this but that's to bad. I'm going to go with canon.

Err.... no.

From Visual Effects Supervisor David Stipes:

Stipes Google Groups said:
Chris wrote:
> Well, I am looking for some ship size info.. I know that the Enterprise is
> about (or exactly) 641m long, and the Borg ship is about 3 times that at
> 2000m (all dimentions).. I'd really like to know how USS Voyager, USS
> Defiant and the two known Jem Ha'dar ship classes (the fighter and the
> battleship) compare to those sizes. I would imagine that all of the latter
> are smaller then the Enterprise however the Jem Hadar battleship could come
> close? Any info on that at all?

> Trypt



Akira = 860'
Sabre = 625'
Steamrunner = 800'
Vor'Cha = 1500'
Neg'Var = 2250'
Jem Hadar Battle Cruiser = 2500'
Jem Hadar "Bug" Fighter = 500'
Cardassian "Hediki" Fighter = 500'
Voyager = 1200' to 1250'
Defiant = 560'
Small Bord of Prey = 360'
Martok's Bird of Prey = 450'
Runabouts = 65'
DS-9 Station = 5280'
Reliant (Merada Class) = 500' to 560'
Some fans may argue these sizes with me...but these ARE what we use on
the Trek shows. You may get some variation in an episode in order to
satisfy a particular story point.

David Stipes, Visual Effects Supervisor, DS-9

Note that the difference between Defiant and Sabre classes is 65 feet - or very minimal.

Okay...so there are comparable sizes...
How does this prove that Defiant and Saber are comprable war ships? My statements point stands. They were still getting torched by single shots. I do not understand your argument are you just being contrary or is there a point I should be tryin to understand from this data other than size?

"No where the same"? Nonsense.
18% vs. 50% and higher for , Voyager and Galaxy and 100 percent for Defiant. No it's not the same.

Your argument about the Excelsiors weapons and the one that says the Akira has 15 torpedo launchers are based on the same thing - inspection of the model, not on screen evidence of all the weapons firing.
BASED...yes...but the logic doesn't follow through.
Reasonably we've seen these ships use almost every firing arc just because of screen time. Akira has had the same screen time and we've never seen it fire aft, or latteral or even fire all of it's forward tubes. It's thus reasonable to call into question whether it has full use of those hard-points.


Wait a minute, I just noticed this in your post above the one with replies to my post:

So by your own system the Akira has 15+ torpedo launchers, it's "canon". It makes it even lese "no where the same" than before.
The structure of your sentence didn't make any sense. Could you elaborate as to what you're trying to say.

Two pages back you denounced the Akira as a relic from the early 24th century, now it's super-modern?
Juno, I'm not responsible for Saito S's statements.
If you want to know why he thinks the ship is modern then you need to ask him or try and keep up.

The Borg beam sweeps across the Akira and destroys it. So apparently the Akira doesn't like Borg beams tearing it to shred from stern to bow...how pathetic.
Indeed. A 400 meter ship gets taken out by a sweep of the Borg tractor beam and Defiant at 120 or in this Movie 50 meters long remains completely intact. It's truly pathetic .


The point about hero ships have been brought up multiple times before and you've made it clear you're not interested in it, so I won't bother rehashing it.
Thank you because that interpretation is only an undesirable. You can complain about it all day long but in the end the scene is still canon and calling Defiant a Hero ship doesn't change the facts. What am I supposed do? Take points off or something...that the evidence we have.

*shrug* I don't interpret I just give you the facts and if necessary speculate reasonably on canon. No evidence justifies so far that these ships are comparable to Defiant or are combat oriented ships. I make the same argument for the Nebula class which "seems" to have a plethora of torpedo tubes but NEVER EVER use them and JEEZ guys you haven't even given an explanation of why.

So far you're quibbling over "The beam swept across the Akira", "OH Defiant is the same size as the Saber", Split the hair if you wish but it doesn't change the fact that these ships fall far short of the Defiant in defensive ability and offensive ability. Every indicatioin is that these ships are run-of-the mill, garden variety.

Intrepid: 15 phasers and 4 tubes
Galaxy: 12 phasers 3 tubes
Sovereign: 16 phasers and 9 tubes
Defiant: 4 Phaser 2 phaser turrets, 4 torpedo tubes
Nova: 10 phasers 4 tubes
Excelsior 28 phasers 4 tubes
Constitution II: 18 phasers 2 tubes
Miranda: 14 phaser 4 tubes

But this so called "modern ships of First Contact

Akira: 3 phasers 15 tubes
Saber: 3 phasers 2 tube
Steamrunner: 4 phasers no torpedo tubes
Norway: Who knows

These ships are at best after thoughts. They weren't properly designed or scaled or armed. Akira has the most hull detail only because it was planned to play a central role.
 
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Could you please resize those images to something more suitable (I think the rules state you should aim for a max of 800X600 for in thread images) because it is making the thread really stretchy for me and I assume for others as well.

18% vs. 50% and higher for , Voyager and Galaxy and 100 percent for Defiant. No it's not the same.

It is when you look at the Excelsior, which was the main focus. 7 out of 28 is pretty close to 3 out of 15.

Your argument about the Excelsiors weapons and the one that says the Akira has 15 torpedo launchers are based on the same thing - inspection of the model, not on screen evidence of all the weapons firing.
Reasonably we've seen these ships use almost every firing arc just because of screen time. Akira has had the same screen time and we've never seen it fire aft, or latteral or even fire all of it's forward tubes. It's thus reasonable to call into question whether it has full use of those hard-points.
Just like it is reasonable for someone to call into question if the Excelsior has 28 phaser banks if we don't see them fire. Maybe even more so if around 7 give the ship decent coverage as it did in "Paradise Lost".

However, I'm not trying to argue against the number of phasers the Excelsior has, my issue is that the standard of "canon" you apply to, and to the Steamrunner and Sabre, you don't seem to be applying to the Akira.

Wait a minute, I just noticed this in your post above the one with replies to my post:
Model and on screen evidence is definitely canon.
So by your own system the Akira has 15+ torpedo launchers, it's "canon". It makes it even lese "no where the same" than before.
The structure of your sentence didn't make any sense. Could you elaborate as to what you're trying to say.
If you declare the the Excelsior's model is "canon" and therefore it has 28 phaser banks, then you should apply that same standard to the Akira and consider that its 15 torpedo launchers are also "canon".

Juno, I'm not responsible for Saito S's statements.
If you want to know why he thinks the ship is modern then you need to ask him or try and keep up.
He may have said something to that effect, but I was quoting one of your posts where you go on about the Akira being a newer design than the Defiant.

The Borg beam sweeps across the Akira and destroys it. So apparently the Akira doesn't like Borg beams tearing it to shred from stern to bow...how pathetic.
Indeed. A 400 meter ship gets taken out by a sweep of the Borg tractor beam and Defiant at 120 or in this Movie 50 meters long remains completely intact. It's truly pathetic .
The Defiant took a disrupted hit to the edge of its nacelle (why the Borg hit there when the Defiant looked to be stationary I don't know) and was left completely adrift (in the end it was only saved by the DS9 showrunners complaining about FC wanting to blow up their ship). The Akira blew up thanks to a solid and sustained hit, call it a quibble if you want, but I still don't see how that is pathetic.

The point about hero ships have been brought up multiple times before and you've made it clear you're not interested in it, so I won't bother rehashing it.
Thank you because that interpretation is only an undesirable. You can complain about it all day long but in the end the scene is still canon and calling Defiant a Hero ship doesn't change the facts. What am I supposed do? Take points off or something...that the evidence we have.
You don't have to do anything you don't want to do. The fact is the Defiant was DS9's hero ship and it was just about always guaranteed to make it through any situation relatively intact because of its special status. I personally think that should be taken into account, and when I compare its performance to other ships I do have that in mind, along with other things I consider to be reasonable speculation.

I'm not trying to argue that the Defiant isn't a good combat vessel, I just don't agree with your speculation that every other Starfleet vessel is rubbish at combat. It seems likely we won't agree on that point, but I doubt it will impact our individual enjoyment of Trek.

Intrepid: 15 phasers and 4 tubes
Galaxy: 12 phasers 3 tubes
Sovereign: 16 phasers and 9 tubes
Defiant: 4 Phaser 2 phaser turrets, 4 torpedo tubes
Nova: 10 phasers 4 tubes
Excelsior 28 phasers 4 tubes
Constitution II: 18 phasers 2 tubes
Miranda: 14 phaser 4 tubes

But this so called "modern ships of First Contact

Akira: 3 phasers 15 tubes
Saber: 3 phasers 2 tube
Steamrunner: 4 phasers no torpedo tubes
Norway: Who knows
Now you're applying the same standards to the Akira you gave the Excelsior, that's all I was arguing for.
 
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Warning: huge post incoming (even by my standards :rommie:). I'm hoping to put this all to rest here.
I've given you all the lee-way I can.
You've given me leeway? :lol:
I have a somewhat high standard for evidence and logic that you simply couldn't grasp in this issue.
How foolish of me to think that I, a mere mortal, could begin to comprehend your mighty logic.
Your refusal to accept the canon model as evidence and "Paradise Lost" along with reasonable speculation becomes an issue of interpretation.
I am not refusing to accept anything when it comes to canon. "Reasonable speculation" and "an issue of interpretation" is what I have been trying to say this IS. Choosing not to agree with your speculation isn't me "refusing to accept facts", it's just that I have my own reasonable speculations, as well.

When you said (repeatedly) to "look at the model" or "canon model", regarding the Excelsior and other ships, I just assumed you meant "look at the on-screen model". As in, study the filmed appearances of this ship and look at the number of visible weapons. How was I to know that you didn't just mean that, but also included a non-canon source as legit when talking about "look at the canon model"? I'm referring, of course, to this:
And you're wrong.
(bunch of huge pics of Excelsior blueprints; you really SHOULD shrink those or make them links, they are stretching the thread as Jono pointed out)
--
Now I've done my due diligence of visually proving my case of 28 phasers. If you still don't agree that these are phasers despite that their canon then I don't know how to tell you this but that's to bad. I'm going to go with canon.
For heaven's sake. Stick to your own standards of evidence, will you?

Star Trek: Unnamed is not canon. Those were drawn by fans. And as per the studio policy, NO blueprints or schematics - even those published by Paramount or Pocket - are "canon".

You kept saying "Look at 'Paradise Lost, look at 'Paradise Lost'." And I'm TELLING you that going by THAT EP ALONE (and not involving non-canon blueprints that you like to pretend are canon), one cannot KNOW that the Excelsior has 28 phaser emitters. One can speculate that, but not "know" it.

We only SEE it fire from SIX distinct points. As I said, we can assume that those other bolt-things on the saucer are also phaser banks, since we saw a couple of them fire phasers. (Note: legitimate divergence here; you interpreted those bolts as two emitters each, I interpreted them as one each. Hence, ten on the saucer vs. twenty. No way to know with absolute certainty on that particular point, but my "no way it's 28" is based on one emitter each, hence ten on the saucer). Besides the saucer banks, we saw phasers fire from the neck below the impulse engines (there's almost no chance that there isn't an accompanying bank on the other side, so that's two), from the belly (so we know there's at least one down there, but we don't know FOR CERTAIN that there is more than one), from the dorsal point between the impulse engines, and from a point between the nacelle pylons. That's IT. That's all we KNOW.

"Inspect the canon model" does not mean "consult Star Trek: Unnamed." It means inspect the on-screen model. And the on-screen Excelsior model does not in any way prove 28 phaser emitters.

Let me say this: frankly, given what I laid out in terms of the difference between "arrays" and "banks" (and the disadvantages associated with the latter), I actually personally LIKE the idea of Excelsior having 28. I think your reasoning makes sense, I think the Star Trek: Unnamed blueprints make sense.

That doesn't change the fact that going STRICTLY by "canon", it is not a sure thing. There's nothing in canon stopping the Excelsior from having all those emitters, but it's not "confirmed". That's all I'm saying.
You're mixing up everything and you're in complete retrograde. I EXPLICITLY layout a correction to that post and you're ignoring it. You're ignoring quite a few things. And at this point I'm thinking you saw you were wrong and somehow you're having a problem making the admission.
I'm not ignoring or mixing up anything. I haven't "seen I'm wrong" (since I'm not), and I am NOT the one having problems admitting things here (I have freely admitted how much of MY arguments are speculation, numerous times). And you didn't "explicitly layout" anything about arrays vs. banks vs. emitters, unless you are referring to this:
No you don't know you banks from your emitters. Lets do a little research.

Memory Alpha.
Each bank contained one or more phaser emitters from which the beam energy was actually released but which shared common power sources and targeting systems.
-which, while interesting reading, has nothing to do with arrays vs. banks. It DOES clarify emitters vs. banks, but that wasn't the issue on my end. As I said, YOU were the one who started out saying the Excelsior has "more than 16 arrays"
The question is what do you have to work with. Excelsior has more than 16 phaser arrays and dual fore and aft torpedo launchers and very maneuverable on impulse.
when, in fact, it has none. It has a number of phaser banks (how many, exactly, we can't say for sure in terms of on-screen canon). But an array is a different way of setting up emitters on the hull, one that the Excelsior does not employ.

Oh, and since you are so fond of sticking to canon, the Excelsior has never been shown to have anything better than average or decent maneuverability at impulse. More speculation.

And speaking of ignoring, you ignored this (putting a link instead of posting the contents; this post is big enough already): http://www.trekbbs.com/showpost.php?p=4765733&postcount=73
...which was key to the whole "arrays/banks/emitters" deal. And full disclosure: I did "mix up" my terminology ONCE, when referring to the Defiant's phaser banks (not the pulse cannons, the ones that fire traditional "long" beams) as "arrays" earlier. But you can't accuse me of ignoring something I didn't ignore, and as for mixing things up, like I said, you're the one who started out with "arrays", moved to "banks" without clarification, and then threw in the meaningless "turrets" for good measure.
Okay...so there are comparable sizes...
How does this prove that Defiant and Saber are comprable war ships? My statements point stands. They were still getting torched by single shots. I do not understand your argument are you just being contrary or is there a point I should be tryin to understand from this data other than size?
He can correct my if I'm wrong, but I believe Kestrel's only point in that particular post was that the assertion that the Defiant is tiny compared to the Saber is incorrect.
BASED...yes...but the logic doesn't follow through.
Reasonably we've seen these ships use almost every firing arc just because of screen time. Akira has had the same screen time and we've never seen it fire aft, or latteral or even fire all of it's forward tubes. It's thus reasonable to call into question whether it has full use of those hard-points.
"Akira has had the same screen time" as what, exactly? Excelsior has had considerably more screen time in total, and obviously Defiant and Galaxy have had WAY more screentime than even Excelsior. Intrepid, too.

We've never seen the Nebula do anything other than fire a few shots at a time straight forward (either phasers or torps) on-screen, either, despite it's numerous appearances. Are we to assume that it's lateral phaser arrays don't work and that it has a lousy rate of fire, despite its obvious design similarities to the Galaxy which we know can fire quickly and in (virtually) all directions?

More on this below.
Indeed. A 400 meter ship gets taken out by a sweep of the Borg tractor beam and Defiant at 120 or in this Movie 50 meters long remains completely intact. It's truly pathetic .
Again, you do not know that any of the ships seen being destroyed by the Borg in FC were being hit with full shields. They could have been trashed off-screen and this was just the proverbial straw that broke the camel's back.

And no, that they were "visually undamaged" doesn't mean squat. There is ZERO visible damage to the Ent-D as the Klingon cruisers close in at the end of the fight in "Yesterday's Enterprise" (the little navigational lights were still blinking!). Yet we know that just before the Ent-C enters the rift, Ent-D's shields are failing, the warp core is about to breach and main engineering is falling apart, Riker is dead and the bridge is ON FIRE.

Sometimes the effects guys just neglect to show physical external damage. That doesn't automatically mean a ship isn't beaten all to crap. The "visual record" isn't 100% reliable in Trek.

Again, more on this below.
*shrug* I don't interpret I just give you the facts and if necessary speculate reasonably on canon. No evidence justifies so far that these ships are comparable to Defiant or are combat oriented ships. I make the same argument for the Nebula class which "seems" to have a plethora of torpedo tubes but NEVER EVER use them and JEEZ guys you haven't even given an explanation of why.
I'm sorry, but you have done far more than "give us facts." This is my very problem with your posts: you still refuse to distinguish between "This is clearly demonstrated on-screen; there is no other way to interpret this" and "This looks to me like it's this way based on what we saw on-screen, though it's just one possibility and just my interpretation."

And for the record, I DON'T think the Saber or Steamrunner are meant to be "combat-oriented ships" in the same way the Akira is, personally. Combat-capable, and certainly not worthless as you seem to think, but not on that same level.
So far you're quibbling over "The beam swept across the Akira", "OH Defiant is the same size as the Saber", Split the hair if you wish but it doesn't change the fact that these ships fall far short of the Defiant in defensive ability and offensive ability. Every indicatioin is that these ships are run-of-the mill, garden variety.
Except for the fact that Starfleet threw then against the Borg and the Dominion repeatedly. Your assertion that they were only there as "spam" ships or cannon fodder is just YOUR interpretation.
Intrepid: 15 phasers and 4 tubes
Galaxy: 12 phasers 3 tubes
Sovereign: 16 phasers and 9 tubes
Defiant: 4 Phaser 2 phaser turrets, 4 torpedo tubes
Nova: 10 phasers 4 tubes
Excelsior 28 phasers 4 tubes
Constitution II: 18 phasers 2 tubes
Miranda: 14 phaser 4 tubes

But this so called "modern ships of First Contact

Akira: 3 phasers 15 tubes
Saber: 3 phasers 2 tube
Steamrunner: 4 phasers no torpedo tubes
Norway: Who knows
These ships are at best after thoughts. They weren't properly designed or scaled or armed. Akira has the most hull detail only because it was planned to play a central role.
Pretty sure there isn't any canon evidence (remember, blueprints don't count) for those Constitution II or Miranda numbers, either.

But that aside: "more on this below"; here it is, as promised.

After thoughts. This is true, to some degree: not in-universe, but certainly from a production standpoint. They were basically created FOR that (really short) battle in FC, then they decided to use them later in DS9, but didn't have the time/money/inclination to modify them. But this is the big problem I see with going STRICTLY by canon - literally, interpreting everything we see on-screen as EXACTLY what happened and taking it all at face value.

How come the phasers fired from the torpedo tube in "Darmok"? How could Starfleet hold their own in the Dominion War if ships not named Defiant hardly ever even opened fire? How come the Vor'cha's seen charging into battle during that great moment in "Sacrifice of Angels" were inexplicably tiny compared to the Galors seen past them? http://img819.imageshack.us/img819/6827/sacraficeofangels144.jpg
How come Troi said she had never kissed Riker with a beard before in INS when she had, a number of times?

The shows are written and produced by fallible real-life humans. Sometimes they make mistakes, or do things in an odd way, or are constrained by budgetary or time restrictions and the realities of television production. Mistakes happen. Do we REALLY want to say that everything that happened on screen is absolute? This is why I think it is essential to take out of universe considerations into account. "Hero ships" DO matter. Are we really to believe that the Enterprise(s), the Defiant, and Voyager are just BETTER than any other ships in the fleet? The producers show the hero ships as being able to survive things other ships cannot. It's a very old trope in science fiction.

And to be frank, I don't think it makes any sense that the Akira has only 3 phaser arrays. I wish they hadn't depicted the model that way. But it could have other weapons we just didn't see (perhaps it mounts phaser "banks" as well, to cover the lack of arrays). Is there any proof that it does? No. Is there any proof that it doesn't? No. That's all I'm saying.

I'm speculating. Quite a bit. I do it all the time; I have my own Trek stories, and to write them, I need to feel like I know, at least more or less, what ships can do. Since the canon and semi-canon information is all over the goddamned place, I HAVE to speculate and fill in the gaps in what I feel is a logical way.

I have nothing against you doing the same. I'm just saying, that IS what you are doing. If you look at the canon visuals, combine it with non-canon info and your own interpretation and come away thinking the Akira sucks, then fine. I disagree, but fine. But there is no solid canon evidence that can be reasonably taken at face-value "proving" that the Akira sucks. There is no evidence unless one goes BEYOND the canon that the Excelsior class has 28 phaser emitters or is particularly maneuverable at impulse. And things like an Akira going down in "one shot" to a Borg cube CANNOT always be taken at face value, nor can you assume that the ship was undamaged. Trek ship power levels are all over the map in the filmed canon and intricate details such as external damage are often not shown.

And regarding mistakes: you stressed that Okuda confirmed the hull registry on the Prometheus, and then went on to say that "mistakes happen, no big deal", and ask "What-I should ignore Okuda?" First off: the hull registry actually supports my theory, since it was NX-59650, and the internal one was NX-74913. But, I don't know of Okuda confirming one OR the other. All I'm aware of is this: http://memory-alpha.org/wiki/USS_Prometheus_(Prometheus_class)#R

This is just another example of what I'm talking about. Out-of-universe, it's clearly just an error, but it leads to three possible in-universe explanations.

#1: it's really NX-59650. Registries don't always go in chronological order. Ignore NX-74913.
#2: the opposite of #1.
#3: the explanation offered on that MA page, that is started as one and was due to be changed to the higher one; they just hadn't gotten to the hull yet. This still proves that registries don't HAVE to be chronological, and supports a theory I've held (mentioned in a previous post) that a design is assigned a registry before the prototype is actually built, so if there are delays in building said prototype, it would finally be built with an "out-of-order" registry. Obviously #1 supports this as well.

There is NO WAY to know for certain which explanation is meant to be correct in-canon or in-universe. So if I choose #1 or #3, and you choose #2, that's fine. We obviously wouldn't agree then, but neither of us has gotten any close to "proving" which one is "fact." And one of the reasons I referenced this is that it's not fair for you to say "Oh, that's just a mistake, it's CLEARLY meant to have a higher registry" in response to it, then turn around and - when I say that the Akira having so few weapons is just a production goof - say "NO IT SUCKS IT HAS ONLY 3 PHASERS WE SAW IT IT'S CANON"

To quote myself:
Of course, the Akira & friends from FC could just BE older, that's still just as possible as mine. Neither one has canon (or even close to it) backing, which just serves to further reinforce just how much of these questions come down to feel and speculation. :lol:

That's ALL I'm getting at.

Whew. I need a drink. :D
 
Could you please resize those images to something more suitable (I think the rules state you should aim for a max of 800X600 for in thread images) because it is making the thread really stretchy for me and I assume for others as well.

The size was needed to make my point so detail would not be doubted. I'll will remove them.

It is when you look at the Excelsior, which was the main focus. 7 out of 28 is pretty close to 3 out of 15.
Actually it's still more than Akira. 18.5% to 25% for Excelsior. But it's proper to in this comparative to count the banks because they the two emitters share the same power source and what we're seeing is an actual hard point not a recess placement. If we go by that it's higher at 44%.

Just like it is reasonable for someone to call into question if the Excelsior has 28 phaser banks if we don't see them fire.
I don't deny it's reasonable to doubt Excelsior. I don't mind if you do but I don't. You're questioning my logic but canon shows me a reasonable use of this ships weapons, canon does not show me that for the Akira.


However, I'm not trying to argue against the number of phasers the Excelsior has, my issue is that the standard of "canon" you apply to, and to the Steamrunner and Sabre, you don't seem to be applying to the Akira.
In understand, yet this isn't an issue of canon it's speculation. They all display old registries, they all have 4 phasers or less. In the case of Akira 15 tubes but have never been shown in the full combat situations we've seen. They've also never have been seen before prior to First Contact. My speculation on this canon information is that these are mothballed ships that have been reactivated with limited systems. (I mirror this reasoning from speculation that the Galaxy were constructed during the war with incomplete space frames. This would also have had been done for moth balled ships that were missing it's combat system to be restored only marginally)

That's is the evidence that implores me to not treat the Excelsior and the Akira as the same. The Excelsior was always a main ship in Trek. Even an Admiral took a 87 year old design as his Flagship in Best of Both Worlds. Clearly these are fully respected fully armed fighting ships. Even if just an absence of similar information for Akira what we've been shown isn't favorable for the class. Even the Melborne didn't Death Blossom on a Borg Tractor Beam like the Akira did. It might be splitting hairs but the way they showed the Akira and other ships was totally unfavorable even compared with normal Federation ships.

He may have said something to that effect, but I was quoting one of your posts where you go on about the Akira being a newer design than the Defiant.
I sure you that was only in answer to his post. I do not believe they are newer designs or modern at all.

The Defiant took a disrupted hit to the edge of its nacelle (why the Borg hit there when the Defiant looked to be stationary I don't know) and was left completely adrift (in the end it was only saved by the DS9 showrunners complaining about FC wanting to blow up their ship). The Akira blew up thanks to a solid and sustained hit, call it a quibble if you want, but I still don't see how that is pathetic.
Defiant is a smaller ship.
The Burst Defiant took would logically be more concentrated and it actually lasted longer.
It's shield were down.
It was already damaged.

To me this information says the situations aren't remotely alike. One ship is destroyed one ship survives. I gotta stick with that because it's the facts.

You don't have to do anything you don't want to do. The fact is the Defiant was DS9's hero ship and it was just about always guaranteed to make it through any situation relatively intact because of its special status. I personally think that should be taken into account, and when I compare its performance to other ships I do have that in mind, along with other things I consider to be reasonable speculation.
I'm a drafter, how can we make "hero" ship" a tangible factor in a equal comparison?

It seems likely we won't agree on that point, but I doubt it will impact our individual enjoyment of Trek.
Oh no, I'll like it anyway!

Now you're applying the same standards to the Akira you gave the Excelsior, that's all I was arguing for.
Yeah because that's why the canon data of the models show us. My speculation doubts Akira is legitimate on that count because their is a lack of situation data combined to the sudden appearance of the ship in canon.

When you said (repeatedly) to "look at the model" or "canon model", regarding the Excelsior and other ships, I just assumed you meant "look at the on-screen model". As in, study the filmed appearances of this ship and look at the number of visible weapons. How was I to know that you didn't just mean that, but also included a non-canon source as legit when talking about "look at the canon model"? I'm referring, of course, to this:
For heaven's sake. Stick to your own standards of evidence, will you?

You shouldn't have assumed. You should have asked.
Despite the schematics being created by uncanon sources they do represent the model and these hard points are easily verified.

(Note: legitimate divergence here; you interpreted those bolts as two emitters each, I interpreted them as one each.
I didn't interpret.
I counted. Not only do I have close ups of the actual model but I have the model these points are verified in every way except in your mind where you interpret they are not phasers. (So be it) But that's not logical or canon since they are exactly the same points. You lack that consistency of analysis. It's one thing to verify which points have actually fired it's another thing to actually identify them properly by physical similarities. That's really the only thing that matters.

Concerning the Registry of Prometheus and my mistake with Okuda...

The Prometheus
CGI model gives the ship's registry as "NX-59650". However, production designer Michael Okuda used "NX-74913" for all the internal displays, including the ship's dedication plaque.~ Wiki


Memory Alpha
There was some confusion during the production of "Message in a Bottle" concerning the registry of the Prometheus. According to Michael Okuda, he had used the number NX-74913 on all the internal displays and the ship's dedication plaque. However, the Foundation Imaging FX artists did not get the memo and used the number 59650 instead. Although Okuda's number did appear on screen, the Foundation number was much more visible. According to Star Trek: Communicator issue 152, the Prometheus was redesignated NX-74913 after stardate 51461, right before the date the Prometheus was hijacked by Romulans. This was probably stated to alleviate the registry confusion mentioned above. If this statement was correct, it would suggest that the crew of the Prometheus modified the interior of the ship to reflect the new registry number before the old one was changed on the hull. It would also suggest that the ship had the old registry removed completely by "Endgame". The Prometheus having such a low registry number was meant to show that the ship had been in development for a long time.

------------
If one wishes to interpret it this way I certainly don't mind but it doesn't make sense for the ship to retain it's NX designation after changing the registry number. It CONFIRMS Chronological order (The bold above) Tracking the ships development requires a consistent registry designation. It serves no purpose to change it's Experimental registry. I will regard it as merely a mistake. Interpreting this as a long registry only adds questions that I don't even entertain on the various errors on the Defiant MSD.
 
Well, I tried. :lol: I thought that was a pretty epic post, too. Ah well.
I don't deny it's reasonable to doubt Excelsior. I don't mind if you do but I don't. You're questioning my logic but canon shows me a reasonable use of this ships weapons, canon does not show me that for the Akira.
You do realize you have been coming across like you very much DO mind if someone "doubts Excelsior," yes? What happened to the canon model absolutely showing 28 phaser emitters and if we can't see them that's our problem?
You shouldn't have assumed. You should have asked.
Despite the schematics being created by uncanon sources they do represent the model and these hard points are easily verified.
So let me get this straight.

We go back and forth for post after post, with you telling me to "look at the canon model" and "look at 'Paradise Lost'" over and over. Innumerable times, you have pounded away at the fact that you are not just making up wild theories, but "adhering to what we saw"; "I'm sticking with canon"; etc etc. Then, suddenly, out of nowhere, you post these huge images of non-canon blueprints with all the phaser emitters called out with big red numbers.

You don't see the contradiction there? You don't see the problem with hammering away at the idea that ONLY CANON MATTERS for days, insisting that I reference a specific episode over and over to verify what you claim, then suddenly go "Here is the proof, geez" and toss out these fan-made blueprints (which, I might add, don't even show ALL of your 28 emitters on their own; some of them are pointed out only by you)? But, OH, I shouldn't have "assumed" that by "adhering to canon", you meant "adhering to canon." I should have asked if what you really meant was "adhering to canon, and some fan-made blueprints." Silly me. :rolleyes:
(Note: legitimate divergence here; you interpreted those bolts as two emitters each, I interpreted them as one each.
I didn't interpret.
I counted. Not only do I have close ups of the actual model but I have the model these points are verified in every way except in your mind where you interpret they are not phasers. (So be it)
AAAARGHAAAARHAGAHAH :klingon:

Ok, we'll try this again. What I meant by "you interpreted the bolts as two emitters, I interpreted them as one": http://img163.imageshack.us/img163/610/paradiselost534.jpg

Those 5 little bronze-ish rectangles arranged in a semi-circle behind "USS Lakota" are the phaser banks. Each little rectangle contains two small circle shapes; what I was referring to as "bolts", since they kind of look like metal bolts to me.

You interpret each "bolt" as an emitter, each capable of firing a beam; hence, two emitters per rectangle, ten on both the dorsal and ventral surfaces, twenty emitters total on the saucer. I interpreted each "bolt" as simply parts of a single emitter; I don't see each bolt firing it's own phaser beam, only the rectangle does. Hence, 5 emitters dorsal, 5 ventral, 10 total on the saucer. See?

Watching "Paradise Lost" is not very illuminating either way, since the beam kinda leaps out from the middle of the rectangle.
Not only do I have close ups of the actual model but I have the model these points are verified in every way except in your mind where you interpret they are not phasers.
I never interpreted those points as NOT phasers. I very clearly said they WERE in my last couple of posts. And... you have "close ups of the actual model"? You have "the model" (what does THAT mean, anyway? You got a replica sitting on your desk?) Then why not post these supposed "actual model" close ups, instead of posting some fan-made blueprints...?
But that's not logical or canon since they are exactly the same points. You lack that consistency of analysis. It's one thing to verify which points have actually fired it's another thing to actually identify them properly by physical similarities. That's really the only thing that matters.
I find it a bit amusing that you criticize my lack of analytical skills while apparently having completely missed my emphatic, unambiguous acknowledgment in previous posts that the points on the saucer MUST BE phaser banks even though we only saw a couple of them fire.
Concerning the Registry of Prometheus and my mistake with Okuda...
------------
If one wishes to interpret it this way I certainly don't mind but it doesn't make sense for the ship to retain it's NX designation after changing the registry number. It CONFIRMS Chronological order (The bold above) Tracking the ships development requires a consistent registry designation. It serves no purpose to change it's Experimental registry. I will regard it as merely a mistake. Interpreting this as a long registry only adds questions that I don't even entertain on the various errors on the Defiant MSD.
That's all I was going for, was the idea that a registry could seem "out of order" with respect to when a prototype for a new class actually launched, due to having been assigned earlier in the design process, and then said process being delayed. Regardless, trying to get that specific point across wasn't why I brought this up again in my last post.

I probably should have stuck to what I said a couple posts ago, and stayed "done". But I let myself get dragged back in. :lol: Still, we seem to be at loggerheads, and I don't see that changing, so eh.
 
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Jono said:
You don't have to do anything you don't want to do. The fact is the Defiant was DS9's hero ship and it was just about always guaranteed to make it through any situation relatively intact because of its special status. I personally think that should be taken into account, and when I compare its performance to other ships I do have that in mind, along with other things I consider to be reasonable speculation.

I'm a drafter, how can we make "hero" ship" a tangible factor in a equal comparison?

Apply a -3 defence buff? :p

The problem is we can't, it's pure speculation and is somewhat arbitrary. The only way we could is if we had some decent on screen evidence of both of these ships fighting together as non-Hero ships.

We have seen two scenes with both Defiants and Akiras as starship extras, "Message in a Bottle" and "Endgame", however neither provide any evidence one way of the other. In "Message..." neither the Defiants or the Akira appear to have any trouble in the battle. We do see that the Romulans target the Akira first, but you can argue that it was because the Akira was the greatest threat or because the Akira was the weakest link. As for "Endgame", that battle was pretty much a non-event, so again useless. So, we end up back at square one.
 
Well, I tried. :lol: I thought that was a pretty epic post, too.

It was...Definitely a lot of effort.
Can't say you aren't trying.

You do realize you have been coming across like you very much DO mind if someone "doubts Excelsior," yes? What happened to the canon model absolutely showing 28 phaser emitters and if we can't see them that's our problem?

To be precise, I don't mind questioning if all the emitters are functional. I believe they are. What you're saying is that these pods in the rectangles represent one emitter. Problem is we know from TMP that they are actually two emitters. We have Enterprise and Reliant proving they are twin emitters. Despite the FX in DS9 the common denominator is the physical model which hasn't changed. So is the glove don't fit you must...:lol:. No that not right. Still This is a VFX mistake. You could say this a DS9 development. In other words cheap FX. The multiple salvo shots from TWOK would have been expensive to recreate and we know Trek is cheap.

So let me get this straight.

We go back and forth for post after post, with you telling me to "look at the canon model" and "look at 'Paradise Lost'" over and over. Innumerable times, you have pounded away at the fact that you are not just making up wild theories, but "adhering to what we saw"; "I'm sticking with canon"; etc etc. Then, suddenly, out of nowhere, you post these huge images of non-canon blueprints with all the phaser emitters called out with big red numbers.

You don't see the contradiction there? You don't see the problem with hammering away at the idea that ONLY CANON MATTERS for days, insisting that I reference a specific episode over and over to verify what you claim, then suddenly go "Here is the proof, geez" and toss out these fan-made blueprints (which, I might add, don't even show ALL of your 28 emitters on their own; some of them are pointed out only by you)? But, OH, I shouldn't have "assumed" that by "adhering to canon", you meant "adhering to canon." I should have asked if what you really meant was "adhering to canon, and some fan-made blueprints." Silly me. :rolleyes:
AAAARGHAAAARHAGAHAH :klingon:

Either TWOK is wrong (the precedent)
Or DS9 is wrong. But in either case we're still dealing with the same hard point. I guess I assumed you had seen TWOK and knew there was prior example of the use of hard point. I didn't know you were obvious to it's previous effect. Clearly you've only seen Deep Space Nine's interpretation of the use of this hardpoint.

That's all I was going for, was the idea that a registry could seem "out of order" with respect to when a prototype for a new class actually launched, due to having been assigned earlier in the design process, and then said process being delayed. Regardless, trying to get that specific point across wasn't why I brought this up again in my last post.

Yes, it's possible but I don't believe it.
The 50,000's registry would put it (estimating) 2 Decades before the Galaxy at 988.91111111111111111111111111111 a year. and that would be the same time period as the Enterprise C. That makes no sense.

I probably should have stuck to what I said a couple posts ago, and stayed "done". But I let myself get dragged back in. :lol: Still, we seem to be at loggerheads, and I don't see that changing, so eh.

I just assume it's just miss-communication.

Apply a -3 defence buff? :p

The problem is we can't, it's pure speculation and is somewhat arbitrary. The only way we could is if we had some decent on screen evidence of both of these ships fighting together as non-Hero ships.

We have seen two scenes with both Defiants and Akiras as starship extras, "Message in a Bottle" and "Endgame", however neither provide any evidence one way of the other. In "Message..." neither the Defiants or the Akira appear to have any trouble in the battle. We do see that the Romulans target the Akira first, but you can argue that it was because the Akira was the greatest threat or because the Akira was the weakest link. As for "Endgame", that battle was pretty much a non-event, so again useless. So, we end up back at square one.

What about Valiant?
 
^ Unfortunately we haven't seen an Akira face a Jem'Hadar Battleship to compare it to. In fact we haven't seen an Akira take on a Jem'Hadar fighter and I can only remember one instance where we even saw an Akira and it was in the background and its phaser blast just went offscreen. The only time the AKira got to do anything was to be blown up by the Cardassian weapon platforms so to show how scary they were.

In fact I'm pretty sure we only see three Federation ships ever destroy a Jem'Hadar vessel through the entire run of DS9, the Defiant and the Valiant and amazingly the third is the Rio Grande. So there really is nothing to work with.
 
^ Unfortunately we haven't seen an Akira face a Jem'Hadar Battleship to compare it to. In fact we haven't seen an Akira take on a Jem'Hadar fighter and I can only remember one instance where we even saw an Akira and it was in the background and its phaser blast just went offscreen. The only time the AKira got to do anything was to be blown up by the Cardassian weapon platforms so to show how scary they were.

In fact I'm pretty sure we only see three Federation ships ever destroy a Jem'Hadar vessel through the entire run of DS9, the Defiant and the Valiant and amazingly the third is the Rio Grande. So there really is nothing to work with.


The Rio Grande.
That's completely ridiculous.
I guess you're right.
 
Speaking of hero ships... the Rio Grande is canonically unkillable. Screw Defiant, Rio Grande is the REAL hero ship! :devil:
 
The Rio Grande had a nice journey, it took Sisko to his first meeting with the Prophets in the premier and to his "final" meeting in the last episode.
 
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