Galaxy Class Starship
U.S.S ENTERPRISE NCC-1701-D
Flight Control (Conn)

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The Flight Control console, often referred to as Conn, is responsible for the actual piloting and navigation of the spacecraft. Although these are heavily automated functions, their criticality demands a human officer to oversee these operations at all times. The Flight Control Officer (also referred to as Conn) receives instructions directly from the Commanding Officer.

There are five major areas of responsibility for the Flight Control Officer:

During impulse powered spaceflight, Conn is responsible for monitoring relativistic effects as well as inertial damping system status. In the event that a requested maneuver exceeds the capacity of the inertial damping system, the computer will request Conn to modify the flight plan to bring it within the permitted performance envelope. During Alert status, flight rules permit Conn to specify manoeuvers that are potentially dangereous to the crew spacecraft.

Warp flight operating rules require Conn to monitor subspace field goemetry in parallel with the Engineering department. During warp flight, the Flight Control console continually updates long-range sensor data and makes automatic course corrections to adjust for minor variations in the density of the interstellar medium.

Because of the criticality of Flight Control in spacecraft iperations, particularly during crisis situation, Conn is connected to a dedicated backup flight operations subprocessor to provide for manual flight control. This equipment package includes emergency navigation sensors.


Specific Duties

Flight Control Panel (Cruise Mode)
Conn also serves as a liaison to the Engineering department in that he/she is esponsible for monitoring propulsion system status and providing system status reports to the commanding officer in the absence of an engineering officer's presence on the bridge.


Flight Information Input

There are five standard input modes available for specification of spacecraft flight paths. Any of these options may be entered either by keyboard or by vocal command. In each case, Flight Control software will automatically determine an optimal flight path conforming to Starfleet flight and safety rules. Conn then has the option of executing this flight plan or modifying any parameters to meet specific mission needs. Normal input modes include:
Graphic example
Graphic example

Copyright © 1997 Tan Ngo-Dang
Contact: tangowebmedia@sympatico.ca
URL: http://www.tht.net/~tan/ncc1701d/conn.htm
Created on 06/29/97
Updated on 12/08/97
Page status: final