It sure did, did you not watch ST:PRO?I would imaging the QSS drive would have come up in Prodigy.
It sure did, did you not watch ST:PRO?I would imaging the QSS drive would have come up in Prodigy.
It's funny because Warp 10 was hit several times in TOS.
I think that's incredibly silly.A practical consideration of the TNG-and-beyond logarithmic warp scale is that as you go faster and faster into ludicrous speeds, you will get these ridiculous warp factors with more and more decimals, like 9.999999999999999999999999999999999912. Who wants to say that out loud?
I basically did that for the Warp Factor 3.0 scale that I made which was taken from the TNG era Warp Factor scale, and I threw away the Hand-Drawn curve to infinity that is past Warp Factor 9.I think it's more efficient to just say "warp 13" or "warp 23" or whatever it would have been in the TOS-era scale.
Kor
Sort of, but I didn't change the formula, I just used the existing TNG era formula.Sort of like the FASA redesign of the warp factor in their aborted TNG era roleplaying game. In TOS the scale was the warp factor squared. For FASA's TNG scale, it was the warp factor to the fifth power. This would make the FASA TNG Warp 10 traveling starship able to cross the Galaxy in a year if they could maintain it.
It's funny because Warp 10 was hit several times in TOS.
That was before the warp scale with its system of determining warp speeds was overhauled, presumably in the 24th century.
That reminds me of Voyager’s Vaadwaur hyperspace—though it more closely resembles that of Babylon 5.in The last jedi, a small shuttlepod (actually the cockpit of the resistance transport seen in the preceding film) went from Crait (a system near naboo) all the way to Cantonica in the corporate sector (a system literally on the opposite side of the galaxy) in only a few hours.
star wars hyperdrive is ridiculously fast.
Is there a "Light Year" figure to indicate how far they traveled, or what Hyper-Space Lanes they took so we can measure how far they traveled?in The last jedi, a small shuttlepod (actually the cockpit of the resistance transport seen in the preceding film) went from Crait (a system near naboo) all the way to Cantonica in the corporate sector (a system literally on the opposite side of the galaxy) in only a few hours.
star wars hyperdrive is ridiculously fast.
The role playing game said that TOS warp is C cubed. Warp 13 TOS (2200ish x the speed of light) seems like it's just a little faster than warp 9 on the tng scale.I think that's incredibly silly.
I basically did that for the Warp Factor 3.0 scale that I made which was taken from the TNG era Warp Factor scale, and I threw away the Hand-Drawn curve to infinity that is past Warp Factor 9.
After that, I just let the TNG era Warp Factor formula run naturally to infinity.
It works just fine, and the #'s that you would use, don't get too large with any type of travel that you would practically use on a week to week basis in a regular ep of Star Trek.
Most Wf usage ends up between: 1-Digit to 3-Digit Warp Factors.
Very, Very rarely do you venture past those speeds since they get so fast, that you can easily cross the span of Galaxies in short order.
Is there a "Light Year" figure to indicate how far they traveled, or what Hyper-Space Lanes they took so we can measure how far they traveled?
ICThe role playing game said that TOS warp is C cubed. Warp 13 TOS (2200ish x the speed of light) seems like it's just a little faster than warp 9 on the tng scale.
Never Mind, I looked it up, the Star Wars Galaxy is 120,000 ly in Diameter.Their galaxy could be a hundred times smaller than the Milky Way.
The top known speed of the TOS USS Enterprise was Warp Factor 14.1 (under duress), which using the old system (which was also used in ENT) would have the ship go 2800 times the speed of light. Which means if USS Excelsior wished to break this record, it would need to reach something closer to the TNG scale of Warp 9.9.
However using those old rpg warp factors, the older TOS ships weren't that much slower than typical TNG starships. With the high end Constitution IIs and Excelsiors pushing Warp Factors 10-12. Not much below the Galaxy-class' TNG scale Warp 9.6 (more like Warp 9.4 on the high end with Warp 8 being on the low end). If the Kelvins could stabilized a Constitution for long range travel at Warp Factor 11, a redefined TNG scale would place that at Warp 9 (which would be about Warp Factor 11.5)
That reminds me of Voyager’s Vaadwaur hyperspace—though it more closely resembles that of Babylon 5.
In Trek is helps to have swan like design and such—but if you just “open” up the subway door, you can get by with a less sophisticated ship?
In terms of speed, the Vaadwaur underspace allowed VOY to traverse 200 Ly's in about 1 minute and 21 seconds based on the on-screen dialogue... but it took time for Janeway to get to the bridge since receiving the report that they were dragged inside in the first place, so I'd say it's about 2 minutes total, if its real time.
If it is 100Ly's per 1 minute, then that would be 6,000 Ly's in an hour, aka 144,000 ly's per day, or 52.56 million x C.
Not bad.
We know the underspace corridors go all the way to Talaxia - but they don't appear to extend to the Alpha or Beta Quadrants it seems - Voyager would have been 1000 ly's closer to Earth if the Vaadwaur kept up their end of the deal - which means, the ship would still be in the DQ roughly (or right near the edge of the Delta and Beta Quadrants.
They are superior to because they are naturally occurring, but they also appear limited in how far they extend - which I guess is still useful for DQ exploration if you can get there and know how to use them
There's no "Official Map", and everything is kept secret by remembering entrance/exit points in a persons head.
That limits the accuracy.
For all we know it could span across the entire Milky Way.
There's no proof for or against that it might be Natural.
There's simply not enough time exploring the nature of 'UnderSpace'.
The only thing we know is that LOTS of species have been using it for centuries to cross vast distances.
Remember, the Vaadwur "Found it" by accident and made use of it by exploring it.
They even mention needing to "Maintain It".
What that entails, we don't know.
Does that mean they have to do something to keep it open? We don't know.
Does it mean cleaning up and space debris sitting inside UnderSpace Corridors due to accidents flying inside? We don't know.
Giant chunks of 'UnderSpace' isn't even explored properly.
There's no evidence that it's Natural or Artificial.
We just don't have enough info to determine either state.
The only thing we do know is that it's there, to be used.
It's been there for centuries as well, and that it's VAST and covers a VERY long distance relative to real space.
To accidentally access it, you have to have your Warp Field collide with the UnderSpace Corridor, which drags you into it.
That's how Voyager found it, sheer dumb luck while going at Warp.
That's a needle in a HayStack kind of thing given the vastness of space.
With no apparent outside markers, you're just hoping to collide with it, that's maddening to find out other than to get lucky or waste lots of resources trying to map it's equivalent passage through real space.
True, but that's only a small section of the entire network that Voyager got info on.Only the Vaadwaur were the ones who said to never keep data records for security reasons, but otherwise, we don't know if the Turei have the same policy (they only wanted to ensure that VOY's own databanks were purged of this information as they considered the under-space theirs, but for all we know, the Turei do in fact keep extensive data in their computers) - oh and, VOY's own databanks were never purged of this information.
Yeah, it's been several centuries and countless other species were using the UnderSpace Network, so who knows how clean it is.As for maintenance of the corridors... I suspect it depends on a few factors: degradation would likely be fixed by targeting the radial walls with deflector pulses to stabilize them if degradation was occurring and obviously NOT keeping debris inside it (which the Turei hadn't done, either due to ignorance or sheer neglect).
Hard to say, whomever built it, could've built it as a fast way to cross the entire Galaxy, and we don't know about it.Also, VOY's brief stint (2 mins long trip) was enough to gain extensive data on the corridors themselves, so its probably a relatively simple to run extrapolative algorithms for the computer to find where they are and how to more easily access them (but, its very likely the corridors only have few points of exit/entry, and they could be very far in between, so it wouldn't necessarily be too practical because it could take months or years to reach the nearest point and then there was no guarantee more Turei ships won't be lurking inside (for VOY that is - for general exploration and expansion efforts, it would likely be enough).
Given that the Vaadwur themselves only maintained memory knowledge of the routes, they might not have explored the entire thing.While I will agree the data is limited, if Gedrin was honest about VOY finding itself 1000 LY's closer to Earth, then that means the under-space does NOT in fact extend to the AQ (or BQ for that matter), but is mainly native to the DQ as a whole (and the Vaadwuar themselves mentioned the corridors are naturally occurring, and I don't think they were lying about it) - it may lead from one end of the quadrant to the next, which is useful if you want to make a shortcut through the Quadrant yes, but that still means you need to GET there.
Remains to be seen, personally I would add the option in future series to have it spread across the entire Milky Way Galaxy like the Mycelial network.In this instance, the under-space would likely be similar to Borg TW network... but much more localized (native to the DQ specifically, but doesn't span the galaxy).
True, but that's only a small section of the entire network that Voyager got info on.
Yeah, it's been several centuries and countless other species were using the UnderSpace Network, so who knows how clean it is.
Hard to say, whomever built it, could've built it as a fast way to cross the entire Galaxy, and we don't know about it.
Who knows given the lack of info in total.
Given that the Vaadwur themselves only maintained memory knowledge of the routes, they might not have explored the entire thing.
They didn't keep computerized data records of it.
Something the Federation & other species would do.
Remains to be seen, personally I would add the option in future series to have it spread across the entire Milky Way Galaxy like the Mycelial network.
But accessing it would be hard for average folks if they don't know about it because it's literally finding a needle in a hay stack level of hard to find.
And with Warp Drives, you're not likely to be traversing the same point in space, so it's completely random if you encounter it.
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