They debate it. They conclude otherwise. I dont remember the exact circumstances though, if I am honest. I do however seem to recall rational minds (as opposed to cultural contempt, which is what causes them to debate it in the first place) tend to win out.We see Romulans and Klingons debating this topic on screen in TNG and DS9, though.
Because the technobabble solutions the cruisers are capable of work as a force multiplier. I am not sure that is the correct term, but similar concept. They cannot do the combat oriented things that a cruiser can. Need to counter romulan or klingon cloaks? We have seen cruisers do that repeatedly.Yes. So? It's a warship which happens to have sensors which are capable of scientific tasks (or some scientific tasks). What's the problem if teh ship cannot do everything a cruiser can?
They also get swatted out of the void like flies (the only things that get destroyed at similar rates are some of the formerly mothballed century-old UFP ships). Efficient maybe, but only if you are willing to sustain ridiculous casualties, which in fairness, both the klingons and dominion are.... if you ignore that a Defiant is smaller and hence is harder to hit. Birds of Prey and Dominion bug-ships stick to the same concept, and they seem to be efficient.
Smaller ships are harder to hit, yes. But these are civilizations that can target small subsystems on other ships. I am presuming that there is pretty heavy jamming going on, which accounts for misses at even ridiculously close ranges. But there are trade-offs.
When small, you cannot absorb damage. Why do you think consoles explode when ships get hit in Star Trek? Out of universe it is a cheap way to show damage. In universe, it probably some kind of feedback through the power system. The shield takes a hit and some of the energy surges back through the power system. Some circuits cannot handle the load and when the breakers...break... it is pretty energetic. Best I've got, that... Worse of course when the naked hull is hit. At that point there is impulse shock, and a larger ship can potentially take those hits without damage to critical systems, and the physical space means impulse shocks propagate through a smaller proportion of crew spaces.
Smaller ships have less circuitry to act as a buffer, and are more vulnerable to catastrophic hits when their shields go down, which is why lethal console explosions seem to happen rather frequently on defiant class ships compared to other larger vessels (which might also be a result in part to the fact that their power systems are already in a state of barely controlled overload).
It is not bad. It is sub-optimal given the strategic mission and tactical doctrine of starfleet, and it has serious downsides that prevent it from being acceptable for large-scale production.Come on, we can argue if it is a good idea to have more Defiants or not, but I don't buy that the Defiant is a bad warship, not from what I saw on screen
Look at it from the perspective of a Starfleet officer in procurement.
You have ships that are relatively safe, perform just as well in terms of throwing energy around, and can perform the full range of duties expected of a starfleet vessel but is larger and more expensive to produce.
vs
A ship that is hell on wheels in terms of damage per tonne, but is unsafe to operate, and does not have a mission when a war is over and will just sit around gathering stray hydrogen atoms--in peacetime situations where it would be useful, it probably cannot get there in time because its engines are slower.
Unimatrix Zero. The Voyager survives protracted battle, alone, with a tactical cube. The Defiant class (discounting First Contact for a moment, because we dont know other parameters) cannot match that. Next most comparable is a dominion battleship in Valiant, wherein a defiant class ship by that name starts getting bridge crew killed out from under it, and significant internal structural damage before they even lose shields.Can you cite the according episode? I'm not talking about technobabble solutions here, show me an episode where an Intrepid performs better in battle than a Defiant.
Yes, but for your argument to work, the circumstances matter.However, they lost.
They obviously have. The Akira is a new ship class, produced in the 2370s during the time of the Dominion War, and they are rather common.The Federation doesn't seem to have produced that much ships in the Dominion war, see my answer to Simon above.
Which marks it as distinctly different from other ships of its class. Glass cannons describe them pretty well.Martok's Bird of Prey doesn't seem to be much weaker than the Defiant...
Granted (which is one of those instances of groan-worthy writing), but even then the war was not a foregone conclusion.No, they won by divine intervention.
Ok. Even at best possible speed over distance it takes a very fast feddie ship (say, an Intrepid) a year to make 1000 ly. Which means they can make about 19.23 ly a week. That is an average (because they dont spend that entire time at warp 9.975). At that speed it takes 8 years to cross the federation. They can probably do it faster if they REALLY have to, warp 9.975 is pretty close to 10,000 c for example, it is still going to take 9.6 months to cross the federation. Now that is end to end, and a lot of their borders are closer, the romulan neutral zone is 800 light years from earth, 8 months at average warp, a month at max warp for an Interepid class. For a defiant, it would take at least double that.I think it's 5 km³
Space is vast.
You wonder why the UFP often does not have a lot of ships in range AND why a reserve of defiants would not be useful? That is why.
The incident with the romulan plot to suborn the klingon government you mentioned earlier? Defiants could not have done that job, even if they were available. Yeah, the UFP had to scramble together ships on short notice (some of which were in end-stage construction or in need of repairs at the time) but it was short notice space is kinda huge.
They are used in emergencies, yes. Medical relief supplies etc. But last I checked they are not used for regular cargo runs to bring apples to vulcan.This is actually a good point. But still, we also see regular cruisers perform cargo duty within Federation territory in TNG, so I assume it has some effect. Of course we can hardly calculate the exact numbers, so it's speculation.
Government owned is different from Starfleet. They have a civil service.We never actually see an independent Federation freighter in the Federation as far as I remember, they all are government-owned.