PropertyValue
rdfs:label
  • USS Banting
rdfs:comment
  • The USS Banting (NCC-3120) was an Excelsior-class starship that saw service during the 24th century. The ship took part in the Mertipian Wars of the 2370s. (Star Trek: Banting)
  • This ship and her crew were used as the main player Oberth-class vessel in Starfleet Academy bridge crew training simulations for the Class of 2288. (TOS video game: Starfleet Academy) This ship was seen in-game with the given name and registry number clearly written on her hull. This ship was also used in the elite Klingon Command Academy bridge crew training simulations for the Class of 2290. As such, she was encountered in the Beta Ceti star system tending a section of the Federation's sensor probe net monitoring the Klingon border. (TOS video game: Klingon Academy)
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:memory-beta/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:stexpanded/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
float
  • CAPT .png
Status
  • Mothballed
base width
  • 144
Launched
  • 2372
Affiliation
Registry
  • NCC-639
Name
  • USS Banting
Type
  • Explorer
  • fed
ncc
  • NCC-3120
Base
  • Red .png
X
  • 0
Class
  • Excelsior
Y
  • 0
float width
  • 144
abstract
  • The USS Banting (NCC-3120) was an Excelsior-class starship that saw service during the 24th century. The ship took part in the Mertipian Wars of the 2370s. (Star Trek: Banting)
  • This ship and her crew were used as the main player Oberth-class vessel in Starfleet Academy bridge crew training simulations for the Class of 2288. (TOS video game: Starfleet Academy) This ship was seen in-game with the given name and registry number clearly written on her hull. This ship was also used in the elite Klingon Command Academy bridge crew training simulations for the Class of 2290. As such, she was encountered in the Beta Ceti star system tending a section of the Federation's sensor probe net monitoring the Klingon border. (TOS video game: Klingon Academy) Likely named after Sir Frederick Grant Banting, a Canadian medical scientist, doctor and Nobel laureate noted as one of the co-discoverers of insulin.