Is this supposed to be a coherent argument? And how does "Starfleet might be able to build a thousand ships in a year, which would easily replace 40" disprove the no numbers aspect? Just because you list a number doesn't mean you actually gave a logical and canonical explanation for how to get it.Destructionator XIII wrote:SancheztheWhaler wrote:Great, so now Destructionator is coming along with more No Numbers bullshit.Destructionator XIII wrote:Moreover, the "less than a year" is by definition a lower limit. Starfleet might be able to build a thousand ships in a year, which would easily replace 40.
Why isn't it replaced tomorrow? There might be up to a year between placing the order and actually getting the result out. All the ships coming off the assembly line tomorrow are already allocated to something else (replacing old ships or whatever).
An analogy is in November 2009, I took $1000 out of my savings account to cover some surprise expenses. I didn't put the money back in savings until April 2010. Does that mean I only made 1000/6 = $167 / month? Or does it mean only about $167 was left over to add to savings after paying all my other bills each month?
NO NUMBERS LOL
Fucking retard.
Although 40 ships may be a lower limit, that doesn't mean your upper limit of 1000 ships/year has any validity.
You're arguing that Starfleet can order and build 40 new starships in less than 12 months... with zero evidence... and you're calling me a retard? I think someone spent too much time on the short bus...Destructionator XIII wrote:SancheztheWhaler wrote: If Starfleet is building 1000 ships a year, why wouldn't Shelby say they would be replaced in a week?Fucking retard.me wrote:Why isn't it replaced tomorrow? There might be up to a year between placing the order and actually getting the result out. All the ships coming off the assembly line tomorrow are already allocated to something else (replacing old ships or whatever).
Your lower limit might very well be 40, and the upper limit might be 45, but I'm the retard because I'm not just accepting your lack of evidence...Destructionator XIII wrote:SancheztheWhaler wrote:and you've yet to demonstrate Federation shipbuilding capacity is in excess of 40 ships/year (except by "common sense").Fucking retard.me wrote:Moreover, the "less than a year" is by definition a lower limit.
I'm not even sure where to begin with this argument... first of all, what makes you think Starfleet always responds within a day or two? Because the Enterprise always seems to do it?Destructionator XIII wrote:The Federation is 8000 light years across, and warp drive would take a couple years to cross that distance, yet there's always at least one ship just a day or two away whenever shit happens, throughout TOS, TNG, and DS9. If we assume it is a 2d circle, it's area would be 50 million square light years.SancheztheWhaler wrote:I'll say it again - either show actual, canonical numbers demonstrating a Starfleet ship size in excess of a couple of thousand starships, or concede.
If a starship has a median maximum warp of about 5000 times the speed of light and is "in range" if it is three days away from the disturbance, a starship can cover a radius of about 40 light years, which is an area of 5,000 square light years.
50 million / 5000 = 10,000 starships just to provide timely response to their own territory. Why don't we see most those ships? Well, again, the Federation is so vast that half the fleet is a year away from you on average! And those ships all have a lot of their own shit to do, exploring strange new worlds, providing assistance to colonies, etc - the kind of stuff we see Kirk and Picard do most weeks.
What makes you think they have a substantial (if any) presence in their remote territories (away from the Neutral Zone)? Perhaps they only have a couple of dozen scouts and surveyors in their remote territory, and 90% of their fleet is near the Neutral Zone. Real World Example - how much of a presence does the USN have near the US's Antarctic bases? Do they keep a carrier battle group positioned nearby at all times? Perhaps a couple of submarines and a frigate? Or do they position those forces near the strategically important territory (i.e., the US Mainland, Hawaii, East Asia, and Europe)?Destructionator XIII wrote:For Wolf 359, they got together 40 ships in one day. One day means they could gather starships from a range of about 14 light years. This implies a much higher density than we calculated above, but since Earth and other big Federation worlds were less than one day away, it'd make sense that fleet density would be higher there than throughout most the Federation, which is surely thinly populated. This high density to fight the Borg supports a huge fleet - how else could they spare so many ships without leaving vast volumes of their territory with no presence at all?
You're starting from the conclusion, but you've failed to demonstrate that they can actually build 200 ships per year. The only thing you've conclusively demonstrated (which no one disagrees with) is that the Federation can build at least 40 ships a year.Destructionator XIII wrote:If starships have an average 50 year lifespan, which is a little high, since I can't think of any ships in the show that actually lasted that long (even the original Enterprise was around for maybe 40 years, with at least one major refit in that time, and it is the oldest ship we know), but if they do, 10,000 starships replaced over 100 years implies that they must be able to build at least 200 per year, plus growth. The Wolf 359 replacements were likely some from the regular replinishment budget and some out of the growth budget.
At the end of the day, DS9 flat out contradicts your "FEDERATION HAS 10,000 CAPITAL SHIPS!!!" bullshit. Given that this was a major war that could lead to the destruction of the Federation, one would assume that it dedicated a substantial proportion of its fleet to the war. 600 starships can only represent a substantil proportion if Starfleet is a couple of thousand ships strong. Unless you're seriously going to argue that, even though facing an enemy bent on their destruction, Starfleet insisted on keeping most of its forces on exploratory missions in its deep regions.
If you want a real world analogy, during WW2, both the US and Japan committed every ship they felt they could spare to each major battle. At Midway, the US had three fleet and Japan four fleet carriers. In the US's case, this was 60% of their fleet carriers; in Japan's case 100% of undamaged fleet carriers (or 66% of all floating fleet carriers). Similar proportions of fleet carriers participated in all other major Pacific battles, as did significant numbers of lighter combatants (cruisers, destroyers, frigates, etc.).
And yet we're supposed to believe that, in the face of imminent defeat and conquest by the Dominion, the Federation didn't commit all of its available forces? And you call me a retard...