Talk:UNSC Gorgon

Jumping the Gun?
Unless there's a second reference I missed, I don't think there is evidence enough to justify calling this ship a Gorgon-class heavy destroyer. The text as I read it on Evolutions, page 447 indicates Cole was the first to command a heavy-destroyer-class vessel armed with a MAC. All we can canonically take from this is it's a heavy destroyer and that the first of the heavy destroyers to be equipped with a MAC was the UNSC Gorgon. I see nothing implying the Gorgon was the first heavy destroyer nor the first of its class. It could be that there were many heavy destroyers and that the Gorgon was the first to be brought into drydock and overhauled with a MAC and that vessel was assigned to Cole. I'm not saying the UNSC Gorgon cannot be a Gorgon-class destroyer, only that the text of the novel is ambiguous and that perhaps it shouldn't be stated so definitively in this article. - ScaleMaster117 (talk) 22:50, 30 June 2013 (EDT)


 * The article's note provides this: "Although the name of the ship's class is not mentioned, the UNSC Gorgon is stated to be the first of its class. Naval classifications take the name for the ship series after the name of the first ship, thus making ships built with the same design members of the Gorgon class." Chimes nicely with the Infinity-class.— subtank   06:44, 2 July 2013 (EDT)

Yes, but the actual article content (despite the note) as well as the infobox to the right of the page is informing readers that the ship is of the Gorgon-class. If anything, it should be a trivia note that it's not known if this is the implication, but that it may be.

The actual wording from the story is "the first heavy-destroyer-class vessel armed with a magnetic accelerator cannon (MAC), the UNSC Gorgon." It's the first one armed with a MAC. That's very different from saying it's talking about a Gorgon-class vessel. In this case, "class" is used like saying something is of the cruiser-class, light-frigate-class or the carrier-class. It's referring to the classification of the vessel type, not the specific ship name of the first of the line (which I agree the Infinity-class implies the UNSC Infinity is the first, and that the UNSC Halcyon was the first Halcyon-class cruiser. The UNSC Halcyon was also of the cruiser-class, but that's again how that usage of 'class' can change. What we need to recognize is what's being referred to in the Cole story. - ScaleMaster117 (talk) 07:00, 2 July 2013 (EDT)


 * I'm slightly confused... From that page, the UNSC Gorgon is a heavy-destroyer-class vessel of ??-class, the first one of ??-class to be armed with a MAC. According to modern naval classification, the name for the ship series is based on the first ship. Ergo, UNSC Gorgon is no longer of ??-class, its classifcation has been "rebranded" as Gorgon-class heavy destroyer. So, what has jumped the gun? — subtank   07:24, 2 July 2013 (EDT)

Maybe see it this way: Assume the Gorgon is already an existing ship and happens to be a heavy destroyer. Before they outfitted the UNSC Gorgon with a MAC, all of the UNSC's heavy destroyer vessels did not have MACs. In this case, Gorgon was the first to be mounted with one.

In Halo (as with any actual navy) there's two separate meanings using the term 'class'. Example: The In Amber Clad and the Forward Unto Dawn are both light frigate-class vessels, as opposed to, say, a heavy frigate-class vessel, but the first ship is of the Stalwart-class and the second ship is of the Charon-class. These emphasize the two meanings of 'class'.

What I'm saying is that the Cole story wording is not clear on which meaning is being implied. I'm only cautioning that where the meaning is unknown with certainty that it not be stated in the main text as certain, but that it just be relegated to a note. - ScaleMaster117 (talk) 08:05, 2 July 2013 (EDT)