Constellation Class
The
Constellation class is a starship type with four warp nacelles for long term
exploration that was first commissioned around 2280.(The Battle, TNG)
Type:
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Cruiser (obsolete)
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Unit Run:
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U.S.S. Constellation, NCC-1974
U.S.S. Gettysburg, NCC-3890
U.S.S. Hathaway, NCC-2593
U.S.S. Magellan, NCC-3069
U.S.S. Stargazer, NCC-2893
U.S.S. Valkyrie, NCC-2590
U.S.S. Victory, NCC-9754 plus 37 others.
5 remain in service
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Commissioned
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2283 - 2295
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Dimensions
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Length 238 m
Width 135 m
Height 65 m
Decks 11 excluding nacelles
Mass 250,000 tons
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Crew
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520
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Warp Speeds
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Normal Cruise Warp 6
Maximum Cruise Warp 8
Maximum Rated Warp 8.6 for twelve hours
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Armament
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16 x Type VIII phaser banks, 7,500 TeraWatts total output
4 x 2nd class photon torpedo tubes + 200 torpedoes
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Defense Systems
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Shield system, 405,000 TeraJoules
Standard Duranium single hull
Standard level Structural Integrity Field
Strength Indices (Galaxy Class=1,000)
Beam Firepower 150
Torpedo Firepower 250
Weapon Range & Accuracy 175
Shield Strength 150
Hull Armour 10 Speed 645
Combat Manoeuvrability 4,500
Overall Strength Index 220
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Diplomatic Capability
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Grade 5
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Expected Lifetime
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80 years
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Refit Cycle
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Minor 18 months
Standard 7 years
Major - No major refits envisaged for this class
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General Information
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The Constellation class was fielded during the 2280's as a modern
counterpart to the Constitution class then in service. Like the Constitutions,
the Constellation requirement issued in 2272 called for a vessel capable of
long duration exploratory, scientific and diplomatic missions. The new ship was
to be able to perform this role over the longer ranges called for now that the
Federation had acquired new members beyond its previous borders.
In addition, the Constellations combat capability was to put it ahead of any
current or projected vessel in the Romulan and Klingon Empires. The
Constellations configuration marked a substantial change in Starfleet design
practice of the time. During this era Starfleet had experienced significant
problems generating and controlling the large scale structural integrity fields
required for heavy cruiser class ships.
The solution adopted was to build smaller vessels within one single hull unit,
while larger vessels required two hull units fitted with independent SIF's; the
Constitution class is a classic example of this philosophy.
With the Constellation it was thought that SIF technology had advanced to the
point where a Heavy Cruiser class could be fielded within a single hull. This
would allow much duplication to be avoided, freeing up space for extra
equipment and improving the efficiency of the design. In addition to their
unusual hulls, the Constellations employed four warp nacelles instead of the
usual two - the first Federation starship ever to try this variation. It was
thought that this would give the Constellation class a significant increase in
speed and manoeuvrability across the warp flight envelope and improve the fuel
efficiency at medium cruise speeds by some 15%.
In retrospect it can be seen that the Constellation designers attempted to
accomplish too much in one step, a problem not helped by an unusually rushed
design process which virtually guaranteed that faults would be experienced in
service. Severe problems were encountered with the development of the new warp
core and several vessels experienced a variety of failures with this system -
the most notable being the USS Algeron which had to eject its warp core on
three separate occasions because of emergencies.
After a great deal of time and effort working on this problem it was decided
that the warp cores of the Constellation class were simply not up to the job of
producing the power required. Starfleet was denied the resources required to
produce a new design and refit the fleet, so instead a "stopgap"
option was chosen - the power output of these ships was restricted by limiter
software in the engineering systems. Unfortunately while it solved the near
constant emergencies, this measure also robbed the Constellation class of some
of their most important advances. They were now seriously under powered for
their size, a factor which adversely affected almost every aspect of their
operation.
Despite this Starfleet was committed to the production of these ships on a
large scale. This went ahead as scheduled, and the Constellation class became
the mainstay of the fleet. Over the years many attempts were made to rectify
the problems with the Constellation class, and eventually some success was
achieved.
Between 2300 and 2310 six units received a new uprated warp core which brought
them close to their original designed power output. Other units of the fleet
received new control software which allowed their power to be safely boosted by
some 15% on average. However, by this time the class was some twenty years old
and had fallen well behind the leading edge of technology.
It was decided that an extensive refit of the Constellations would not be an
efficient use of resources, and so these ships were forced to soldier on with
their problems. With the advent of newer designs in the 2330's some of these
vessels were retired altogether, while others were assigned border patrol
duties.
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