I've been told that Starbase 001 was a totally unrealistic design. How so?
It's not to say I can't make up reasons pretty easily, but the show didn't give us too many, and they'd need to be pretty good reasons when one considers how many starships and other useful things one could create with that commitment of resources.
I've never heard the term "Starbase 001" either.
I don't quite understand why they need such a big space station, either. There is probably room for a million people. It's not to say I can't make up reasons pretty easily, but the show didn't give us too many, and they'd need to be pretty good reasons when one considers how many starships and other useful things one could create with that commitment of resources. All I can say is I can't imagine the stations have much, if any, ability to defend themselves against warp-speed attacks, so I don't figure defense is one of their most important duties.
I don't quite understand why they need such a big space station, either. There is probably room for a million people.
I believe that the term Starbase 001 comes from the novels.
Clearly a starbase has a different function from a starship. I have no trouble in accepting that the Federation may expend significant time and resources on building one. Or two. Or more.
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I disagree.
Hypothetically speaking, SF would be idiotic not to install defensive systems on-board one of their largest designs which were designated as star-bases as well (TNG did among other things refer to them in such a capacity).
Warp-speed attacks would be relatively doable to deflect given the fact weapons that SF uses are apparently warp capable (at least the torpedoes are), and these large star-bases are huge ... making their defensive shields that much more powerful and not really easy to break through.
If you recall, DS9's defenses were only penetrated (after a time) when a fleet of 50 ships confronted the station.
Since DS9 is smaller than a mushroom type star-base, it would make sense it would be less powerful in comparison.
I don't quite understand why they need such a big space station, either. There is probably room for a million people.
There are good reasons for building large habitats in space that can hold tens of millions of people or more. Read The High Frontier by Gerard O'Neill for the seminal discussion on the subject. Really, there should be a lot more space habitats in ST than there are.
I think the biggest problem with Spacedock is tactical. In case of an attack, it is a bottleneck waiting to happen. If not heavily armored, it would be an orbiting Pearl Harbor, with battleships/starships getting hit in the channel/doorway.
I'm very familiar with space habitats, but don't necessarily accept the quick assertion that Starfleet starbase=space habitat per se. I also don't accept that those "good reasons" for doing this in the first place apply as easily in Trek, with its terraforming and near-unlimited resources and everyone fighting over planets anyway (???);I'd also have to silently accept the idea that the starbases are actually large-scale civilian habitats for Federation citizens and not pure Starfleet facilities, though off the top of my head I cannot think of any references that support this and it seems absurd for the ones that are along contested borders with hostiles and so forth.
I thought maybe the stations overall were so big because that's where they generate and process the bulk of the antimatter, which I would figure is among the most dangerous and valuable commodities in the Federation. I can well imagine this would require dozens of fusion reactors and huge charge-reversal devices and what have you. I don't know that I'd want to live on top of all that, but let's hope the Starfleet safety record on that stuff is good.
I think the biggest problem with Spacedock is tactical. In case of an attack, it is a bottleneck waiting to happen. If not heavily armored, it would be an orbiting Pearl Harbor, with battleships/starships getting hit in the channel/doorway.
True, the door is a problem. There should be more and bigger doors.
If I had been charged with the task of making that model more sensible, I would have broken out the razor saw and done this:
http://i112.photobucket.com/albums/n167/aridas_sofia/trek/SpacedockRev.jpg
Maybe it wouldn't have had the drama of an opening hatch, but I'm sure creative camera angles could have made up for any problems.
Beyond the debris/micrometeorite problem, the enclosed dock area is also handy to keep sensetive/classified projects away from prying eyes.
If I had been charged with the task of making that model more sensible, I would have broken out the razor saw and done this:
http://i112.photobucket.com/albums/n167/aridas_sofia/trek/SpacedockRev.jpg
Maybe it wouldn't have had the drama of an opening hatch, but I'm sure creative camera angles could have made up for any problems.
I don't understand. What is that image supposed to be showing me?
Is that dark band supposed to be some translucent wraparound window? Or a forcefield? If the latter, that seems like a very illogical idea. Why waste energy on a forcefield when you can just build a nice functional wall?
And with all that transparency, you severely impair your thermal regulation ability.
Beyond the debris/micrometeorite problem, the enclosed dock area is also handy to keep sensetive/classified projects away from prying eyes.
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