But Starfleet ships are not producing the amount of power that would be needed to make that system workable. That would literally require a starship to convert at least as much matter as is used by the crew, which means you now have to dump dozens of kilograms of fuel into the reactor every second JUST TO RUN THE REPLICATORS.
Lol.
Voyager's warp core produces 4000 teradynes per second for example which allows faster than light propulsion (and of course powers every other system on the ship), but power requirements of replicators were not stated on-screen to my recollection.
Why would they 'dump dozens of kilograms of fuel into the reactor every second just to run the replicators' as you say, when the warp core already produces the energy needed for them?
Even if it were possible to do so, it would still be far more efficient to use a smaller amount of energy to reorganize a pre-existing quantity of matter than to try and create some ex nihilo.
They were using reorganization of pre-existing quantity of matter on the NX-01 via the protein re sequencer and recycling of waste into various other things.
Kirk's Enterprise did the same thing on a more refined level.
The late 24th century technology as I saw it and as it was explained did virtually everything through conversion of matter and energy, or energy and matter on a subatomic level.
Not nearly as intensive as they would be if they were total-conversion devices. It's essentially the difference between a few megawatts (for reorganizers) and thousands of gigawatts (for a conversion device). The ship would literally have to drop out of warp every time somebody orders dinner, and a single replicator would draw more power than the entire ship's weapons, shields, engines and sensors COMBINED.
Your interpretation of course, as ships never dropped out of warp when replicators were in use, and it was already stated on-screen that replicators convert energy into matter.
Matter antimatter reactions don't kill "someone." Matter antimatter reactions--especially the ones that get out of control--kill EVERYONE. A warp core breach will destroy the entire ship and anything unshielded within a hundred kilometers of it; it is inconcievable that a starship actually has hundreds of small matter-antimatter reactors in every room of the ship, a malfunction in any ONE of which can destroy it completely.
Sigh ... they have a gigantic warp core spanning multiple decks that operates on matter/antimatter reactions to produce enormous quantities of energy which is distributed throughout the ship via the EPS grid in a form of a volatile, yet controllable plasma.
Or I guess you haven't noticed that consoles exploding in people's faces had a tendency of killing them on a regular basis?
I've already explained that transporters do not convert matter into energy. They break matter apart and send it somewhere else using energy as a carrier wave.
And I suppose 15 years of on-screen evidence is to be thrown out the window?
Not to mention the episode in which Picard was converted into a state of energy via the transporters when he merged with the alien entity that infiltrated the ship's systems.
I agree that transporters break matter apart, though they apparently have to turn it into phased particles of energy which are sent via the carrier wave to another location and rematerialized into original form.
Energy that SF ships use is made of particles, is it not?
Voyager mentioned Omicron particles (Omicron radiation) as a compatible energy source for the replicators.
If you recall what Torres mentioned about Theta radiation ...
'It's absorbed by a series of radiometric converters. We, recycle the energy, and use it to power all our systems, everything from weapons to replicators.'
It's the particle conversion of the warp plasma (which is used as energy) on a subatomic level that's taking place inside the replicators and not from raw matter.
Those energy particles are rearranged to form molecules, and finally into a piece of solid matter.
Raw matter would be easily and directly recycled into the ship's systems through conversion into energy for storage and later use.
Given how SF was displayed with an ability to actually store energy in suspended states for example, I hardly see the problem here.