With Starfleet ships, its quite obvious where the deflector dishes are. With Klingon and Romulan ships, not so much. Where exactly are they when is comes to their ships?
With Starfleet ships, its quite obvious where the deflector dishes are. With Klingon and Romulan ships, not so much. Where exactly are they when is comes to their ships?
You are correct sir! I literally have the Haynes Klingon BoP manual in my hand.On the Vor'cha class there's a glowing panel immediately below the disruptor port on the forward section that is apparently the deflector for that.
I've always interpreted the glowing ring around the BoP's torpedo port to be a deflector array
The big cannons on the D'deridex and Galor were also supposed to be deflectors, but the VFX people put weapons there.
The (Borg / Voth / Numerous Advanced Alien Species) don't have visible Deflector Dishes.I think that Klingon ships have more integrated deflector designs compared to SF.
On BoP, its supposed to be a glowing 'ring' around the torpedo tube... and on the Vor'Cha class, there is something akin to a deflector on the front.
For other designs, its possible they are more integrated.
Plus, Klingons have been interstellar for longer than Humans (thoug that wouldn't have remained the case for very long because the UFP blends technology and science from its member planets - so UFP technology would similarly be WAY more advanced)... and its possible that their deflector capabilities are not exactly on par with SF's... still capable, but with reduced functionality in terms of versatility.
Some SF starships don't have visible deflector dishes... which is odd at best, but its possible they just don't need them and use other means to do the same thing - plus, their mission profiles wouldn't require of them to have deflector dishes perhaps.
StarFleet ships usually have some form of Teeny Tiny "Navigational Deflector Dish" at minimumSome SF starships don't have visible deflector dishes... which is odd at best, but its possible they just don't need them and use other means to do the same thing - plus, their mission profiles wouldn't require of them to have deflector dishes perhaps.
What it boils down to is the different design philosophies of different ship designers. Matt Jefferies was big on plausible, practical designs, and TOS's science consultants advised that a starship would need some kind of asteroid deflection beam, so Jefferies made sure to put a forward deflector dish on his designs, at least the main ones, the Enterprise and Klingon battlecruiser. Since Wah Chang designed the Romulan Bird of Prey, it didn't have a dish. And when you got to TWOK, the ILM designers didn't give the Reliant a dish. And so on.
That's not what the Memory Alpha states when it comes to the matter, but hey there's different Head Canon's =D.Really, I realized some years back that a deflector beam would only really work at sublight. Whatever energy it projects forward would not be able to travel faster than light outside the warp bubble, so it couldn't precede the ship when it was at warp. The warp field itself would have to be shaped to deflect particles. So I guess it sort of stands to reason that if it could do that, some similar kind of deflection field could be generated at sublight.
The bottom of the saucer, right above the Ventral Planetary Sensor Dome, is a Aux Navigational Deflector (Not Dish Shaped).
That's not what the Memory Alpha states when it comes to the matter, but hey there's different Head Canon's =D.
Here's what the Haynes Klingon BoP manual states about the issue, I think you'll find it interesting.
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Then you might find this interesting.Anyway, the real-life theoretical physics analysis of warp metrics shows that a deflection effect could be built into the field itself, or that the field would automatically "catch" any particulates within its leading edge (and then blast them forward in a lethally intense particle beam once the field collapsed, so that's a drawback). So Trek's idea from the 1960s that you'd need both a warp field and a deflector beam has been superseded by modern theory. The beam would really only be needed at sublight.
I kind of like the new interpretation based on Physicist Erik Lentz updated papers.My favorite warp drive effect in Trek is the one in Star Trek Beyond, because it actually looks like the ship is in a warp bubble. I wish they'd kept that one for the modern shows.
I'm pretty sure the Klingon battlecruiser's deflector dish was meant to be the circular depression in the front of the forward "bulb," complete with a protruding spike in the middle like on the Enterprise dish.
Your Navigational Deflector is a FTL Snow PlowThe deflector array isn't just needed at warp speed, it's also just generally used at full stop and impulse speeds as seen on the Voyager episode "Year of Hell, Part II". https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Navigational_deflector#USS_Voyager_(NCC-74656)
"During the same year in an alternate timeline, a heavily damaged Voyager lost the capabilities of its navigational deflector array along with many other systems during the Year of Hell. Encountering a moving micrometeoroid field, they were unprotected without their deflector and the ship began suffering even more damage. Captain Janeway restored the navigational deflector field, although she was burned due to a massive fire in Deflector Control."
The deflector array could also be used to disperse the harmful particle wave that builds up during warp travel, negating the undesired effect of obliterating anything near your destination.
...which directs the concentrated flow of particles into the bussard collector fields.Your Navigational Deflector is a FTL Snow Plow
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