10 Unused Star Trek Ship Designs We NEED To See

Which teased designs have yet to appear in Star Trek?

By Sean Ferrick /

In all of Star Trek's history, from the main franchise to the expanded universe, there have been hundreds of different ship designs. While many of them have appeared on-screen, even more, exist only in drawings, schematics, and promotional calendars, and encompass both the breadth of Starfleet, its allies, its enemies, and everything in between.

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The ever-expanding Star Trek Universe needs new designs to keep itself fresh. However, not all of those new designs need to be new. Ships that were drawn in the eighties and nineties look as well today as they did then and, with a bit of a polish, could become the next class of ship to fly across our screens.

Some of the below vessels have appeared in a different form, though each entry is targeted at a live-action, on-screen depiction. The will and the work is there, now is the time to put it into practice!

10. Enterprise-C Concept

The Ambassador-class Enterprise-C is another ship that differed between design and realisation. Andrew Probert, who also designed the Galaxy-class Enterprise-D, knew that the Enterprise-B had been labeled as an Excelsior-class ship. While the modified vessel that would appear in Star Trek: Generations was still some time off, the general shape it served as inspiration.

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The Prototype Enterprise-C was more obviously a middle-ground between the Excelsior and Galaxy-class ships. The nacelles matched the latter, while the saucer section was circular like the former, the engineering hull was sleeker and arched backward. A model of this design then appeared in the Observation Lounge for the first three seasons of The Next Generation.

The script for Yesterday's Enterprise called for the arrival of the Enterprise-C. However, it fell victim to budget issues. It was far easier for the production team to construct a model from existing kits. The engineering hull was a re-model of the Constitution-class ships, abandoning the sleeker look of Probert's design. The deflector dish suffered the most from this decision, as the oval original became a circular one to match Kirk's era.

The original Enterprise-C deserves another shot at appearing in Trek, thanks to the logical design progression that it displays.

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