Because then we would have been deprived of KEEEEROCK!!!
God, I can't stand this episode. I'd like to travel back in time and make this script mysteriously disappear.
Oh, you mean this....
Because then we would have been deprived of KEEEEROCK!!!
God, I can't stand this episode. I'd like to travel back in time and make this script mysteriously disappear.
Yup. Isn't the Trek-O-Verse so much more enriched because of that?Oh, you mean this....
I never understood why...
...the Enterprise didn't divert the asteroid before they investigated the planet
why Spock didn't leave a search party on the planet to search for Kirk while he dealt with the asteroid
and why they weren't able to divert the asteroid after all Spock's calculations.
Can asteroids even travel as fast as maximum sublight?
The search party would have been present to see Kirk walking around the local village, waited for a opportunity to approach him.Not sure what it could have hoped to accomplish after the initial party conducted a perfectly thorough search
Look there's some implication that the Enterprise was always four hours ahead and that both it and the asteroid are travelling at some maximum speed. Were they travelling together in some bubble - was the Enterprise hitchhiking in some asteroid wake ?And neither did the writers. But we can always plug the holes:
The bigger question is why they would wish to divert any asteroids at all. It's not as if it's in the Starfleet Charter or anything. But the place was a scientific mystery (apparently terraformed to Earth specs against all odds, being so unlike Earth to start with), plus it surprisingly hosted humans. The heroes would need pressing reasons to try the diverting, and the investigation was required to provide those.
Not sure what it could have hoped to accomplish after the initial party conducted a perfectly thorough search, at McCoy's insistence and against Spock's logic.
Similarly, sending either the ship or the shuttle to search for Kirk after the diverting failed would appear futile: if the Captain simply is nowhere to be found, searching isn't going to help. Better find out all they can about the strange magic that can thwart their search attempts.
McCoy stalled the operation, Spock burned out the engines to compensate. Although we don't know how close he came to accomplishing the task.
There's no "maximum sublight": if a rock travels at 99% lightspeed, another rock can always travel twice as fast (but it still won't break lightspeed - it's a point-of-view issue).
But we might wish to postulate a local speed limit anyway. Perhaps there's an interstellar medium (be it real dust or fictional subspace goo) that stops the Enterprise from going faster than the rock on impulse engines?
Yet this cannot be the reason Spock thinks they will precede the rock to the planet by just four hours. We see from the visuals that the ship is basically touching the rock and that she's making zero effort at moving faster than it does (she's even pointing her bow towards the rock most of the time); "four hours" must refer to a final sprint Spock somehow feels he's entitled to take.
Why's the rock moving at all? Might be natural causes. Might be part of the terraforming project, with rocks artificially accelerated, to be decelerated at destination by the Obelisk, perhaps ultimately to be dropped to the planet. Might be an attempt by forces unknown to destroy the planet. In any case, it's not supposed to be unique - the heroes speak of this "asteroid alley" where the planet should be constantly bombarded to dust but for some reason isn't.
The story begins with a mystery. It ends with the mystery left mostly unsolved. Which is fun in its own right, I guess.
Timo Saloniemi
The search party would have been present to see Kirk walking around the local village, waited for a opportunity to approach him.
Look there's some implication that the Enterprise was always four hours ahead and that both it and the asteroid are travelling at some maximum speed. Were they travelling together in some bubble - was the Enterprise hitchhiking in some asteroid wake ?
I like the idea that Kirk is suspicious of the planet and thats why he spends so long investigating instead of diverting the asteroid straight away. And maybe the asteroids might be used to protect the experimental planet. Keeping other spacefarers away. Except when things went wrong. After all they said on the planet the asteroids were diverted quite often.
I don't think there's anything wrong with the Enterprise diverting the asteroid and saving a primitive civilisation. Its not TNG yet.
What if Kirk had fallen off a cliff or slipped into a river or had a heart attack or been captured by natives - a landing party (in disguise) might be able to help him. Dr McCoy should have been left there too just in case.But if the heroes for some reason do assume Kirk would somehow resurface, then there's no pressing timetable there. Spock's plan of going back after two months is fine and well.
....
Plenty wrong with diverting something that needs no diverting - Spock could already tell that there was no asteroid damage on this planet that was constantly under asteroid bombardment.
...
Timo Saloniemi
Subspace communications need the "subspace" engines perhaps?The ship hasn't lost comms, only engines
But Spock was willing to devote four hours to a search for Kirk at the end of the two-month run, and the choice of the number of hours appeared to be his and his alone (since we learn of no other reason). Would it have helped if those four hours were at the beginning of the two months instead?
The four hour deadline wasn't arbitrary, it was how long they had until the asteroid would hit the planet ("...that asteroid will be four hours behind us all the way.").
We see the ship is a couple of seconds ahead of the asteroid in all the shots during the two-month coasting towards the planet. Or if that distance is supposed to be four hours' worth, then the asteroid must be significantly bigger than the planet!
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