Do you think full scale prototypes are built regularly in the Trekverse?
Right, but I'm not necessarily talking a fully functional prototype. Only one of the same scale, i.e. a full starship hull to test a new nacelle configuration. It might be a fully functional testbed like the Defiant and the Prometheus, but it might also just be the hull with the bare control essentials.
Couldn't they just use a holodeck to simulate everything, load in the variables and then run and observe what happens?
Possibly, but predictions don't always work out the way the designers think they will, even when they're good predictions. This seems to be the case with my favorite interpretation of the Excelsior experiment - the transwarp drive did work, but its advantages on a full scale starship proved to be only minimal compared to traditional warp drive. They were not able to get the kind of superior performance they were hoping for, and the marginal increase wasn't worth the cost of using a more expensive system.
Plus, the holodeck might get a glitch.![]()
...since it defines transwarp as being "everywhere at once."
Right, but I'm not necessarily talking a fully functional prototype. Only one of the same scale, i.e. a full starship hull to test a new nacelle configuration. It might be a fully functional testbed like the Defiant and the Prometheus, but it might also just be the hull with the bare control essentials.
Sure. The TNG Tech Manual states as much. They tested out the full-scale spaceframe at impulse and warp and did a bunch of other stuff before they filled out all the decks with quarters, science labs, etc...
Simulations are great at showing what we THINK will happen, given certain preconceptions. But it's a MODEL, it's not reality.Couldn't they just use a holodeck to simulate everything, load in the variables and then run and observe what happens?
Couldn't they just use a holodeck to simulate everything, load in the variables and then run and observe what happens?
Didn't it treat warp 10 as transwarp though, or at least infinite velocity? I don't recall exactly. But I was under the impression it conflated both concepts.
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