Col. Wolfe wrote:We know that the Alpha was present on earth before the Invid arrived from the animation in Denver.
No actually we don't. Toy/modelkit manufactures can latch onto concepts to produce products for consumption before the unit is actually present in hardware or mass production. That IS a possibility here that the toy/modelkits are out before the actual Alpha is in use.
Col. Wolfe wrote:I always felt the Late return jives more with the Show, "we are all born out in deep space..." made me think when i was younger that 20 or more years had passed since the Invid took the earth, Scott's disintrest and pure ignorance to rabbits and rain wouldn't fit with the ER's time line as he's have been born on earth a few years after Dana.
Which can work even w/n ER timeline:
-we know Carpenter's home was the Tok. for 15years (basically since the end of the 1RW, given 15years is the established elapsed time between Ep36-7), which allows for people to be born out in deep space and grow up.
-Cues in NG, and projected time for 2RW can allow for a few more years on top of that to apply to the NG crew that made it.
-We also know that ASC-era ships are outside of the Solar System BEFORE Carpenter, giving us additional time to play with
-adults on Earth in NG (early) didn't even want the expeditionary force, Rook knew about the Resort Island they visited (looking forward to visiting the place to IIRC)
We have: 15yr + 1yr (Lunk, approx in NG) + 1yr (pre Carpenter, aprox, this can go up to 2yr potentially) +1yr (2RW, aprox from series) =18-9years roughly. Which certainly falls within the range of "nearly 20years" said by the Narrator.
Sgt Anjay wrote:Yes, quite. The choices are "the Alpha predates the Ajax as per the people who created the episodes", or "the Alpha doesn't predate the Ajax per some fans on the internet". Technically? They're BOTH retcons, because they're both retroactively applied events we don't see in the episodes. But one is rather more solid than the other.
No the choices are based on episodes themselves (Ajax pre-dates Alpha) or post episode information that is morphable (Alpha pre-dates the Ajax).
Sgt Anjay wrote:He's not shown using any fighter in the flashback, its a bunch of stills. Lunk and Rand's dialog support the position that the Alpha isn't new; it shows they assume an Alpha is what a UEEF pilot would fly, so there's no need to specify. If the UEEF was known for different veritechs recently it would've needed to be specified, or even caused a misunderstanding. We also hear Wolfe tell Scott he's going to give him "a few pointers" while in the Alpha...clearly his capacity in that specific machine is not in doubt in the episode. In a fighter he and Scott know he's never used? Unlikely.
And in those bunch of stills is a fighter, it is implied that Wolfe is the pilot. Lunk and Rand may actually point to veritech operation being pretty standardized to allow basic operation at minimum given the number of pilots the Beta has (Scott, Rand, Lancer, Lunk IIRC) that overlap with the Alpha roster. Are Wolfe's pointers machine specific (to the Alpha) or tactics based (which doesn't necessarily require the Alpha)?
Sgt. Anjay wrote:Sentinels shows the Beta not working out, in order to explain the use of Alphas but the Betas being a new thing in New Generation per the dialog. The..."fix"...is part and parcel of the scene in which they appear.
To me this would still be a "forced" fix. There is no actual reason that the staff had to go with the Alpha or other NG mecha/designs as being available in this period. They could also have just as easily not included the Beta in the period also and avoided the entire issue. Then there is the issue of meeting the Invid in 2020-2, but no one on Earth knows about them in 2029, etc. Sentinels creates problems to solve by the choices made in its development that are carried forward to this day, even with the housecleaning HG did in 2000.
Sgt Anjay wrote:Oh does he? So his model Cyclone is identified as new, the Beta is identified as new, Shadow tech and the Synchro cannon are identified as new when they show up, but we're all just supposed to "assume" that Alpha fighter is new despite it never being identified as new? There's a dissonance there.
Yes he does identify his Cyclone model as new. The Alpha Fighter is still "new" since w/n the actual 85ep there is no reference of it until Ep61.
Sgt Anjay wrote:You entirely missed the point of what I said. If you go by an Early Return timeline as supported by the 85 episodes, there is no big gap after the end of the 2nd Robotech War (a major plot hole of the Late Return scenario) for the Alpha to have been developed in. It *had* to have been a concurrent development, at the absolute latest, which means it wouldn't be a later development of technology, it would've been of the same technological era.
I think you miss mine. Even with concurrent designs, there will still be a "first" and "second" place for timeline related events like concept, design, approval, testing stages, production, service entry date, etc. It doesn't matter if it's ER or LR (which I agree with you isn't supported by the show), concurrency does not remove "first" or "second" place in terms of when an event happens between the two. In the 90s the US military concurrently developed the F/A-18E/F and the F-22 and RAH-66, they all did not appear at exactly the same time, and did not reach relevant events at the same time.
glitterboy2098 wrote:his suggests that the Ajax program was begun after the Alpha program had a finalized design, since otherwise you get the Ajax stuck in development for over a decade. it doesn't seem that complex.
most likely the Logan was developed alongside the Alpha, and then when the Alpha ended up optimized to the UEEF's doctrine
Timeline dates in the 2E RPG (using 1st 3 era books and RT.com timeline) I constructed awhile back, pulling useful bits here:
-2012 Alpha initial design (Wraith Project)
-2015 Alpha testing (Wraith project canceled/morphed into)
-2018 Logan production began (w/n 6months 12+ squadrons active)
-2020 Alpha entered flight testing, Beta counterpart quickly developed
-2022 Beta shelved after testing
-2020s (mid) AGAC is proposed (XV/H-1) as a pure helicopter program before being merged/morphed w/space fighter requirement
-2028 Prototype flown (YVFH-10), flaws found in first few months
-2029 Ep37 (Early in year, per RT.com timeline)
-2029 (Late in year) Logan being phased out, AGAC declared operational
-2030 Logan switch over to the AGAC
I have to disagree with you about the complexity of the AGAC/Ajax. In some respects yes the AGAC is more conservative design compared to the Alpha, but the transition from helicopter/jet is hardly mature technology. While I don't think the A/B linkup took the best approach, the designers would have lots of experience to draw upon (in-flight refueling, captive aircraft release, space docking, USS Akron/Macon retrieval, Parasite Fighter/Mothership combo, etc), the flight transition of the AGAC would be completely new (and neither two programs involved in this type of transition have done so with success AFAIK). So I can see the Ajax taking as long to develop if they want a helicopter-Jet transition available.