I was pissed off at that scene, although performing a u-turn in an atmosphere while travelling at terminal velocity was worse.I’m pretty sure I can count on one hand the number of Trekkies that were pissed off at that scene.
I was pissed off at that scene, although performing a u-turn in an atmosphere while travelling at terminal velocity was worse.I’m pretty sure I can count on one hand the number of Trekkies that were pissed off at that scene.
This is the kind of story logic that I would have liked to see in the Enterprise Incident instead of skating over how it's possible to just beam onto an enemy ship without them noticing.Kirk went down the planet to save Saavik and Spock, but there was no guarantee they’d all be able to leave the planet before it was destroyed. By sneaking aboard the BoP and taking out Kruge and Maltz, they’d at least have a way to get out of there. And their age was irrelevant. They had both the element of surprise and phasers on their side.
I was talking about ways that the ship can self destruct that is programmed into the ship’s computer. This whole topic was about the destruct sequence.
Except there was no indication in the film that the self destruct did not work as intended.
Then one would think that there would have been a way to only destroy or eject the bridge, not half the saucer along with it.
Why not? Kruge and Maltz seemed to be the only ones left on the BoP. The whole point of them beaming away at the same time that the Klingons beamed over was to hide the fact that they were beaming off the ship at all. If they could beam over to the enemy ship, five men could easily overpower two Klingons that weren’t expecting them. Which is exactly what happened with Maltz later in the movie.
But he didn't know the ship was weakly crewed - and he didn't know the planet was doomed, either!
The Klingons have to lower shields to beam over but they still have a someone manning a transporter station who might be able to intercept an incursion. Ships must have security to prevent incursions after all. They could have sent a couple of people to the planet and a couple to take the Klingon ship but they had no way of knowing how many Klingons were left.
In TOS they occasionally used the entirely logical caveat that beaming onto a spaceship is risky whether due to cramped spaces, spacial distortion caused by warp engines or plot contrivance. My view has always been you beam to a transporter room or risk ending up like Sonak otherwise there'd be no reason not to have an arms race to beam explosives or suicide bombers or strike teams onto enemy ships.They didn't have to beam over to the BoP's transporter station. They could have beamed anywhere on the ship and then conducted a raid.
In TOS they occasionally used the entirely logical caveat that beaming onto a spaceship is risky whether due to cramped spaces, spacial distortion caused by warp engines or plot contrivance. My view has always been you beam to a transporter room or risk ending up like Sonak otherwise there'd be no reason not to have an arms race to beam explosives or suicide bombers or strike teams onto enemy ships.
A transporter room that was not working and was therefore unable to shield them from warp core distortions...If my only choices were to beam over to an enemy ship or beam over to a planet that was about to destroy itself, I’d take my chances with the enemy ship
And Sonak transported to a transporter room, so I’m not sure why you used him as an example.
Sulu did scan the Klingon ship and said that such ship's typically had "about a dozen officers and men", IIRC.Why each ship could not scan the other to detect the number of people aboard is another question
No, he doesn't scan the ship. he spots the "energy surge" and they blast it before getting blasted. After they are crippled Kirk asks what the complement of a Bird of Prey is and Sulu pulls it out of his personal memory banks.Sulu did scan the Klingon ship and said that such ship's typically had "about a dozen officers and men", IIRC.
It's pretty natural to assume the Enterprise would be hobbled when it comes to scanning: there's no Spock at the sensors, the enemy is cloaked, and battle damage lingers.
Yes they did.
- The Enterprise crew didn't know Genesis was about to explode. They started to figure that out when they beamed down, so the choice was escape to the supposedly-stable planet to try to save Saavik and Spock or over to the BOP
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