What could have come along to make these ships obsolete in 2018? Some sort of efficient high speed propulsion (still STL) such as impulse (gravity) drive. Later, add in a Gravity Elimination Field (Interial Dampening Field), then much higher accelerations are possible and maybe early FLT travel (no mass means no Einstein and Newton limitations.)
n Metamorphosis, the Enterprise was sensor sweeping for antimatter residual when searching for the shuttlecraft because it must have a M/AM reactor/engine...
Fact check: There was a residue trail as implied by the "particle" dialog:The interesting thing there is that there was no such residue.
Good catch. In TNG, I envisioned the "warp trail" to be a subspace wake or better yet, contrail left behind from a starship at warp. Starship contrails could be antimatter residue of subatomic particles either deposited in real space or in subspace like a water vapor contrail from an airplane.I think that "antimatter residue" is just 23rd century slang for what is also known as a "warp trail" in the other series.
Certainly, in plot terms it fulfils the exact same function!![]()
In "The Galileo Seven" there's numerous mentions of shuttle fuel. Scotty's working inside a floor hatch when he says something to the effect of the fuel pipe giving way and them losing all their fuel. Think they'd notice if it had been antimatter (as would everyone else on that side of the planet). Then they drain the phasers to get the fuel back. Eh?
Then when they're taking off Spock uses the "boosters" to break them free
and then when in orbit he jettisons and ignites fuel that's seen coming out of the end of the side nacelles.
This might answer the question of why some shuttles are warp capable and some are not, and why some have antimatter residue in their exhaust.
THAT'S why they didn't have any shuttles in "The Enemy Within", they were all having antimatter containment bottles fitted in the nacelle housings.
Excellent solutions plus this relates back to original topic of the thread: how it works? My handwavium:I did read somewhere of a fusion motor being made vastly more powerful by enriching the deuterium it used with antimatter. The impulse engines are supposed to be powered by deuterium fueled fusion reactors, perhaps the antimatter in the exhaust is from this antimatter enrichment. If deuterium is the fuel that's lost, the phaser energy cells could used to extract more from water by electolysis. I doubt they could have made more antimatter. If they used antimatter enrichment the tiny amounts of antimatter required could have been kept in a magnetic containment bottle in the nacelles and only used for high speed flight. Indeed if it wasn't a long mission requiring high FTL or low warp speeds they might not have bothered to fuel up the antimatter bottles at all, or perhaps some shuttles simply aren't fitted with them, perhaps early shuttlecraft didn't. This might answer the question of why some shuttles are warp capable and some are not, and why some have antimatter residue in their exhaust.
I think the impulse reactor/engine layout should also reflect the saucer top hatch markings, too.It also gives me a physical resemblance to the Engineering set, which is something that I wanted to incorporate into my Heavy Cruiser model.
I'm a big fan of assigning functions to the various features we see on the exterior of the ship, so this works well.Feature-wise, the three heavy bands around the bottom of the saucer hull could be a gravity reduction field generator for the saucer portion of the ship. (Not part of the deflectors-screens-shields).
As indicated above, the hand phasers were able to generate new deuterium fuel
What might be measured as "pounds psi", I wonder?
Timo Saloniemi
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