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| Trek Tech Pass me the quantum flux regulator, will you? |
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#1 |
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Commodore
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Impulse Deflection Crystal...?
Then in the TOS-era cast films, we now have this "impulse deflection crystal", which would seem to channel warp power to the impulse drive, so I guess fusion power sources wouldn't be necessary(...?) (We also seem to possibly be able to use the warp drive to augment the impulse drive, so that we can travel something called "warp .5" and other fractions of warp speed...which makes sense if some theories about the impulse drive being more than a mere reaction-based propulsion system...which I like, since they have artificial gravity, they would also have the basis for a reactionless drive...in fact, warp-drive itself could be said to be a reactionless drive - but I mean they could use artificial gravity to propel - push, pull and stop - the ship. Anyway...) Now by TNG's time, we are back to just fusion (according to the technical manual. Inertial confinement fusion, to boot!) I dunno, seems kinda like a step backwards to me. Then again, I guess it makes sense to have a seperate systems - if the warp core goes off line, or is damaged, or has to be ejected - you won't be stranded. Maybe that's why it was fazed out and fusion brought back...? Or am I wrong and the TNG-era impulse drives can also be powered by - or at least get a boost from - the warp drive plasma? What do you techie Trekkies think?
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"The world is my country, science is my religion." - Christiaan Huygens https://www.facebook.com/bryceburchett |
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#2 |
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Vice Admiral
Location: Saint Louis (aka Defiance)
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Re: Impulse Deflection Crystal...?
It's possible that the Galaxy-class may have impulse deflection crystals too--there's two large blue glowy areas above and roughly between the saucer impulse engines--or they might be something totally unrelated. As far as power sources, I've always leaned to the idea that both warp and impulse engines are used to power a ship's EPS grid, but that impulse power is used as a backup to warp power, but also can be used for less energy-hungry systems aboard a ship as well.
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"Shout, shout, let it all out..." |
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#3 | |
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Captain
Location: Sol 3
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Re: Impulse Deflection Crystal...?
Navigator NCC-2120 USS Entente /\
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Stokely: In an insane society, the sane man must appear insane. Harvey Holroyd: Where'd you get that? Stokely: Star Trek. [leaves the room] Harvey Holroyd: [to himself] God, I miss that show. (Source: "Serial", 1980.) |
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#4 |
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Commodore
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Re: Impulse Deflection Crystal...?
IIRC, in TOS, impulse power could be augmented by other power sources (throwing the kitchen sink at it) and vice-versa, impulse power can boost other systems. It was kind of interchangeable. The main difference was that warp power could be regenerated whereas impulse was a fixed fuel quantity. |
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#5 | ||
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Admiral
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Re: Impulse Deflection Crystal...?
The Manual speaks of impulse drive being boosted by subspace coils, but also of the Ambassador class being the first (for a long time?) to do so. Yet the idea of using subspace fields (or "symmetric warp fields") to reduce mass in order to make STL travel easier is a great one - it defeats most of the real-world objections to the magical performance of the Trek STL engines. Every starship would need those fields, then. Now, we can assume that some ships have those subspace coils as part of their impulse engines (like the Ambassador), generating a special field for reducing the ship's mass. But others have this blue crystal, which "governs" or "deflects" the warp field of the warp engines in such a way that the (symmetric rather than propulsively asymmetric) warp field reduces the ship's mass. Hence the two backstage names for the crystal... Coils in impulse engines would be in fashion during TOS and for Ambassador; crystal deflection of fields generated by the warp coils would be in fashion during ENT and the TOS movies. And the Galaxy generation of starships might merge the technologies into a compromise of some sort. Or then the blue glow, which is unique to the Galaxy and not present in the otherwise similar Nebula or "BoBW" kitbash ships, is actually warp glow from the saucer's warp engines, vital for the separated flight mode and apparently used at least in "Encounter at Farpoint" to allow the saucer to reach Deneb IV apace with the battle section. In which case the impulse engines would feature their own built-in coils, as the Tech Manual seems to suggest.
While TOS writers probably had wild ideas about how warp was fueled or how it worked, none of those were so explicit as to contradict the later, more explicit movie or TNG era ideas about antimatter annihilation and hydrogen-antihydrogen tankage and whatnot. Timo Saloniemi |
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#6 | |||
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Commodore
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Re: Impulse Deflection Crystal...?
"The Mark of Gideon" - After Kirk slows the warp engines to sublight: KIRK: Well, let's see. Power, that's no problem, it regenerates. And food. We have enough to feed a crew of four hundred and thirty for five years."Where No Man Has Gone Before" - Burnt out warp engines were regenerated with new parts. "The Naked Time" - all engines shut down cold and it takes 30 minutes to regenerate them to full power. "By Any Other Name" - a several thousand year trip to the Andromeda galaxy was seen as a problem of time, not fuel. Whenever the warp power was severely taxed or drained, it would take time to build them back up again, or "regenerate" them. This occurs in "The Tholian Web" and "Tomorrow is Yesterday". More specific problems could be when the dilithium crystals were not at full power, requiring re-amplification. This occurs in "The Alternative Factor" and to some extent as well in "Day of the Dove" and "The Voyage Home" when the crystals start to deteriorate.
TNG and it's continuity however does have fundamental differences (contradictions) with how dilithium and fuel work. |
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#7 | |
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Rear Admiral
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Re: Impulse Deflection Crystal...?
[edit] hmm . . . Memory Alpha says that the Galaxy class arboretum was on deck 17 which would place it on the lower portion of the saucer |
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#8 | ||
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Admiral
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Re: Impulse Deflection Crystal...?
The two examples of great endurance are dubious, too. "Mark of Gideon" does not deal with propulsion, but with the survival of two people in a situation where the rest of the universe for all practical purposes has ceased to be inhabited. And "By Any Other Name" deals with alien modifications to the drive, these consisting of the addition of a thingamabob into the loop - quite probably a power source of great endurance, as the one performance spec of the ship we see increased beyond previously established ones is endurance at speed.
Timo Saloniemi |
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#9 | ||||
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Commodore
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Re: Impulse Deflection Crystal...?
KIRK: How long would you like it to last?
KIRK: What's the point of capturing my ship? Even at maximum warp, the Enterprise couldn't get to Andromeda galaxy for thousands of years.
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#10 |
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Rear Admiral
Location: Who is John Galt?
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Re: Impulse Deflection Crystal...?
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#11 | |
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Lieutenant Commander
Location: Philadelphia, PA
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Re: Impulse Deflection Crystal...?
I believe Rick Sternbach indicated that those are the arboretum windows, but the labels didn't make it onto the 1701D blueprints. |
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#12 | |
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Fleet Captain
Location: Portland, OR
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Re: Impulse Deflection Crystal...?
As for reverse impulse, I'm increasingly of the opinion that impulse drive was never, in fact, a rocket in the conventional sense. Rather, it too is a form of warp engine, in that it produces a subspace field which reduces the ship's apparent mass and provides directional momentum. Notice that in several instances (mostly TOS but not exclusively) ships without warp power (even the Enterprise herself after being damaged in WNMHGB) do manage to attain low FTL speeds. The "exhaust grill" we often (but not always) see is, in my opinion, a heat exchanger more than a thruster, and not all ship's even need that much external hardware for the impulse engine to run. Therefore reverse impulse power is the same as reverse warp; you just make the field pulse backwards and off you go tail first. --Alex
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#13 | |
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Admiral
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Re: Impulse Deflection Crystal...?
Since the "nozzles" are seldom situated anywhere near a plausible thrust axis anyway, exhaust-based thrust is unlikely from the very start. However, this doesn't mean there couldn't be some exhaust vectoring in addition to the main propulsive action - rather comparable to some aircraft piston engines deriving (marginal) extra thrust from angling their exhaust pipes aft! Indeed, some ship designs feature what looks like mechanical thrust reversers (see the E-E nozzle "lips") even though their "nozzles" are angled in funny directions to begin with and are rather unlikely to spit flames directly aft. Timo Saloniemi |
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#14 | |
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Captain
Location: USS Berlin
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Re: Impulse Deflection Crystal...?
Considering they already considered for TOS that the main and the engineering hull ("star drive section") could occasionally operate separately, I wonder if warp propulsion was all the star drive section would have to rely on. Bob
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"The first duty of every Starfleet officer is to the truth, whether it's scientific truth or historical truth or personal truth! It is the guiding principle on which Starfleet is based! Jean-Luc Picard |
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#15 | |
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Rear Admiral
Location: Maurice in San Francisco
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Re: Impulse Deflection Crystal...?
__________________
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"Star Trek…at times sparkled with true ingenuity, and pure science fiction approaches, and at other times was more carnival like, and very much more the creature of television than the creature of a legitimate literary form." |
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