Despite the fact the the Defiant got them before and the Enterprise-E got them not far after Voyager was lost. what gives? And I know they got 2 tricobalt devices to "even it out"
That makes me think, why did the writers even include the "We have X torpedos and no way to replace them" line? They have replicators and they have antimatter ... what more do they need to build photon torpedoes? They have unlimited energy (between the warp core and the fusion reactors it should be impossible to run out), so the shuttle and torpedo factory should have been up and running by the end of season 1.It didn't seem to be an issue, the shuttlecraft and torpedo factory they had onboard churned out more than enough photons for them over their journey home.
Guys, the only real difference is that one is red, then other blue-white (and the colours totally vary in other versions of Trek, making that a bit moot, too)
They say they're more powerful but it really never made a difference. We never had a story where a quantum torpedo could specifically do something a photon torpedo couldn't.
So... no biggie.
Of course it matters, good old isolinear chips wouldn't have gotten sick from Neelix's cheese.Next you're going to tell us it doesn't really matter Voyager had a sustainable cruise velocity of warp 9.975 or that it had bio-neuro gelpacks![]()
CHAKOTAY: I'll admit the timing seems a little convenient, but that doesn't mean there was a master plan.
SEVEN: Why did the Captain destroy the array?
CHAKOTAY: So the Kazon couldn't use it to attack the Ocampa.
SEVEN: That's what she told the crew, but I believe she intended to remain in the Delta Quadrant all along. If the Array had remained intact, you and all the others would have insisted on using it to return home.
CHAKOTAY: She was keeping it from the Kazon.
SEVEN: The Captain ordered Commander Tuvok to destroy the array. He fired two tricobalt devices. Are those weapons normally carried on Federation Starships?
CHAKOTAY: No.
SEVEN: Yet they were part of Voyager's arsenal. Why?
CHAKOTAY: I can't explain that.
SEVEN: I can. Neither phasers nor torpedoes are capable of creating a tear in subspace. A tricobalt device is. As Tuvok detonated the device, a cloaked ship locked on to one of the array's tetryon reactors and pushed it through the tear into subspace, protecting it from the blast and hiding it from Voyager's sensors. But the Captain and Tuvok knew exactly where it was going. Once Voyager left the area, the reactor was retrieved and began a similar journey, carried by a series of vessels until it was finally delivered to Miste
CHAKOTAY: You've uncovered some interesting facts. But your interpretation is far-fetched. These are random incidents. Granted, some of them are hard to explain, but there's no conspiracy here.
SEVEN: Stardate 51008, Captain Janeway allows Kes to leave Voyager. Neelix told me that Kes had suspicions about the Caretaker. Was the captain trying to silence her? Stardate 51462, the Doctor's programme is transmitted to a Starfleet vessel on the outskirts of the Alpha Quadrant. An attempt by the Captain to contact Earth or a secret communiqu� informing Starfleet of her progress? Stardate 50984, Janeway forges an alliance with the Borg. Stardate 51762, a cease-fire with the Hirogen. Stardate 52861, a non-aggression pact with the Terkellians. She called each incident diplomacy. I believe she was trying to establish a tactical infrastructure in the Delta Quadrant. Over the past five years, Captain Janeway has altered course two hundred sixty three times in the name of exploration. In reality, she was mapping the region and collecting strategic data regarding
That early on the crew had no idea if or how they could make their own torpedoes (and shuttles), so a warning in the heat of battle on the bridge made perfect sense. As they settled into reality they realized that starfleet ships could actually do remarkably well for years on end without a spacedock -- something that was designed into the galaxy class (indepednent missions lasting 7 years without starbase layover)
Were the Enterprise-D's replicators the same first generation replicators the federation had been using for decades?It's not as if things like replicators where a new tech they had been around for a while so they knew their capabilites
For the most part I agree, but it did seem like the Enterprise-E used it's quantums against the Borg cube to greater effect than photons.Guys, the only real difference is that one is red, then other blue-white (and the colours totally vary in other versions of Trek, making that a bit moot, too)
They say they're more powerful but it really never made a difference. We never had a story where a quantum torpedo could specifically do something a photon torpedo couldn't.
So... no biggie.
I think the statement of not being able to produce more torpedoes was based entirely on the ship's damaged condition at the time the statement was made.That early on the crew had no idea if or how they could make their own torpedoes
It was based more on Piller and Taylor's ego that VOY wouldn't be an action show and they would make it stories by drama/character interactions and exploration alone. That went out the window as soon as the ratings started to take a dive. Funny, Jeri Taylor said the audience would find the lack of action "charming" for the movie GEN. When she became showrunner of VOY, she had Janeway in a tank top, backpack and armed with a phaser rifle, fighting large macroviruses.I think the statement of not being able to produce more torpedoes was based entirely on the ship's damaged condition at the time the statement was made.
Not that the ship wouldn't able to if in good repair.
In all seriousness. The torpedo limitation, as well as other things, were self-imposed limitations the writers put on themselves and then abandoned when it became inconvenient.
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