It was Warp 7.
Not in TAS, they once reach a speed of warp 35 or something like that.
It was Warp 7.
All episodes which do above warp 10 are something like not even supposed to happen.
Isn't warp 10 infinite speed where you're at every point of the universe at the same time?
They only said that in Voyager.
In TNG's "All Good Things..." they reach warp 13
Wasn't the warp 10 limit created when TNG was being developed?
About warp 13, someone here mentioned that maybe the warp scale was modified in the future and it's much less than it sounds.
About warp 13, someone here mentioned that maybe the warp scale was modified in the future and it's much less than it sounds.
That doesn't seem likely. I don't know if in TNG they say anything about warp 10 being a limit. They certainly don't do it in TOS, TAS, and in the movies. DS9 was not concerned by that sort of thing. That leaves only Voyager...
Wasn't the warp 10 limit created when TNG was being developed?
About warp 13, someone here mentioned that maybe the warp scale was modified in the future and it's much less than it sounds.
Did they ever really say a thousand light years away? Anyway Kirk is able to get to the center of the galaxy pretty easily in the movies, while Voyager is nowhere near that fast, and that has never really been explained.It's amusing that we're told several times that Chronos is more than one thousand light-years away and given that Archer gets there in his first mission, said mission should have lasted longer than the whole series did.![]()
Did they ever really say a thousand light years away? Anyway Kirk is able to get to the center of the galaxy pretty easily in the movies, while Voyager is nowhere near that fast, and that has never really been explained.
The worst canon decision in the history of Trek was setting Trek in specific Earth years. The whole reason stardates were invented was to prevent that, and then Space Seed and Wrath of Khan just basically bulldozed all that.
If they had to make an Earth-like dating system, then it should have been something like TOS set in the year 105 FE, where FE stands for Federation Era counting the years since the founding of the Federation. The Earth year the Federation was founded would never be revealed, thus allowing for Trek to always theoretically be "our" future.
That's probably when Star Trek should take place. I'm guessing by 2063 we will be nowhere close to any kind of warp drive. I guess I'll find out in 40 years if I'm hopefully still around by then.Or have things take place very far in the future like in Dune... thousands of years...
No, Kirk ordered warp 9 in "The Enterprise Incident" to escape the Romulans, and Sulu acknowledged holding at that speed.It was Warp 7.
Karla Five's ship was originally going at warp 36, and it dragged the Enterprise to a speed past warp 22.Not in TAS, they once reach a speed of warp 35 or something like that.
That's probably when Star Trek should take place. I'm guessing by 2063 we will be nowhere close to any kind of warp drive. I guess I'll find out in 40 years if I'm hopefully still around by then.
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