Agree but the one in Nemesis might be (with the science fiction proviso that we can see it close up.) Mutara could be a newly formed planetary nebula (based on Regula's proximity to Earth) would still need to be SF-ish to have the demonstrated properties....But the Mutara Nebula is obviously not a reflection nebula. (Say, it's got plenty of internal illumination!)
Timo Saloniemi
And since the Federation torpedoes seem to be based on Klingon torpedoes, having the Klingons equipped with Federation torpedoes shouldn't be all that much of an issues aside from some signiature reading.
Chang should have been able to have his crew set those things up to do just a much damage as he wanted, but also could aim to exactly were they needed to disable the gravity on the battlecruiser, which on assumes was by disabling the power systems, since the ship drifts out of control with its lights flickering until they get power restored (and all the bodies and blood hit the floor).
Must have hit the antimatter storage tanks or something to get an instant warp core breach-like effect of that scale.
Can someone here justify to me how there can be all those scenes where ship weapons distinctly dent another ship's hull and yet the crew of the latter ship reports that shields aren't "gone/0%" yet? I could've sworn in Star Trek Into Darkness, the Vengeance's first shot punches a hole straight through the Enterprise's hull and yet later the crew still reports that shields aren't at zero.
Gotcha. Thanks.Can someone here justify to me how there can be all those scenes where ship weapons distinctly dent another ship's hull and yet the crew of the latter ship reports that shields aren't "gone/0%" yet? I could've sworn in Star Trek Into Darkness, the Vengeance's first shot punches a hole straight through the Enterprise's hull and yet later the crew still reports that shields aren't at zero.
SFB explanation is "burn through." The shield absorbs as much damage as it can but the amount of focused energy is great enough to damage the ship anyway. There is only so much energy a shield can actually block, even though it isn't yet inoperative. It works for me as well as any explanation.
What is never explained is when a ship collides with something. Where do shields and the deflector dish come into play then? Who knows. Just accept it, I guess.
I guess the scifi setting actually helps us out - many a dense mini-nebula could be the remnant of an intense space battle, say...
Or even a literal burp, not of a star but of an actual lifeform with a digestive system.
Timo Saloniemi
That shot is so weird... there's this flashing light which just FADES AWAY at the moment Reliant opens fire. Did a "fog bank" just coincidentally block it at the right dramatic moment?Reliant did seem to be hiding in front of a pulsar though.
Star Trek vessels of all types seem to be be vulnerable to the early "soft kill"...
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