2: From ENT's "First Flight", we learned that the NX-Alpha prototype was the first Earth spacecraft to surpass the Warp 2.0 barrier.
The language used in "First Flight" was conclusive: NX-Alpha was the first Earth spacecraft on record to exceed Warp factor 2.0. The dialogue between the various Starfleet personnel as well as with the Vulcans make it clear that NX-Alpha was the first human-built craft to shatter the Warp 2 Barrier.
We also don't know the course, was it directly away from earth for several seconds or did the little ship move in an arc for a longer time, ending up perhaps on the farside of the earth when the ship finally returned to sublight speed.
The language used in "First Flight" was conclusive: NX-Alpha was the first Earth spacecraft on record to exceed Warp factor 2.0. The dialogue between the various Starfleet personnel as well as with the Vulcans make it clear that NX-Alpha was the first human-built craft to shatter the Warp 2 Barrier.
Except that there is no such dialogue in the episode.
All we learn is that the engine designed by Henry Archer has a long history of difficulty with exceeding warp two (although it has more or less regularly reached warp two aboard NX-Alpha before the episode starts, apparently, since there's no cheering associated with reaching that "bump"). Nobody ever suggests that Robinson was the first human to reach warp 2.2, for example. Instead, he is credited with being the first human to deploy an escape pod at warp...
The episode shows our heroes demonstrating that the Archer Engine can indeed maintain steady warp at higher than warp factor 2, but it never even remotely suggests that said heroes would be traveling at a record-breaking speed. Indeed, the concept of "speed record" is never uttered in the episode.
Of course, the concept of a "warp two barrier" is absurd because Earthlings would perfectly well know that there is no barrier there, that others routinely travel way faster. It only makes sense as a barrier in human knowhow, a shortcoming in the available human technology - but we lack proof that the shortcoming would have concerned anything else beyond the NX test program and the Archer Engine.
Timo Saloniemi
Interesting thought: can you travel at warp speed at less than warp one? Warp travel involve a ship moving through subspace, hypothetically your ship could be in subspace and effectively standing still. Warp zero. Kind of a waste of power.1: It's a safe assumption that Cochrane's first warp flight, in order to be a warp flight, must be at least Warp 1.0.
At approximately warp one there should have been no star streaks, what we saw may have been mirco-meteoroids briefly passing through the warp field or interacting with the deflector. Like driving at night through the falling snow.Except we saw a POV shot for several seconds, which suggests a straight line
We can pick apart the dialogue of "First Flight" and parse over it, draw different conclusions if necessary, but it would seem that there is a legitimate point-of-view that Robinson, Archer, Tucker and the Vulcans wouldn't be talking about how tough it is to exceed Warp 2 unless it were a major milestone in spaceflight that humankind was trying to achieve.
Interesting thought: can you travel at warp speed at less than warp one? Warp travel involve a ship moving through subspace, hypothetically your ship could be in subspace and effectively standing still. Warp zero. Kind of a waste of power.1: It's a safe assumption that Cochrane's first warp flight, in order to be a warp flight, must be at least Warp 1.0.
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