When exactly did Voyager took out numerous Borg ships at the same time except apart in Endgame when it used highly advanced technology?
I recall them destroying a Borg probe by transporting a Photon Torpedo on-board in an attempt to disable it.
Next, the ship managed to kill off a Borg Diamond class ship only because they fired a bunch of torpedoes into the TW conduit, forcing it to collapse (which was bound to profoundly tear the Borg ship apart).
Furthermore, they were able to disable a Cube run by Borg children who were out of their maturation chambers prematurely and probably possessed limited tactical knowledge.
In Unimatrix Zero, Voyager was going up against a Tactical Cube, which was able to penetrate it's shields rather fast and inflict moderate damage (7 probably also contributed), then initiated a final assault with the help of a resistance Sphere which was providing heavy support, and the Tactical Cube only ended up destroyed because the Queen ordered self-destruct.
Also, Voyager did not spend all of it's original torpedoes halfway through Season 1 ... I think that happened by the end or mid Season 3 ... and as we already established, off-screen resupplying of resources and possible construction of new torpedoes likely took place (they traded enough times even on-screen to theorize they would be smart enough to requisition anti-matter supplies and manufactured parts for torpedoes themsevles, or they simply made them on the go).
Voyager had a smaller crew in contrast to what a Galaxy class had, so it stands to reason there would be fewer family starters.
They weren't exactly under ideal circumstances where raising kids was viable (although, when Kes was still aboard and she experienced time shifting from the future into the past, we have seen at the very least in that future her family grew ... and who knows how many others) and Voyager started with the short-cuts home when Kes left.
If a Galaxy class has more room for resource/food storage, it would be appropriate for the ratio of consumption.
Intrepid class stocked to the full is more than able to cater to all it's crew without a hitch (problem was, the ship was initially launched for a 2 weeks mission and not a deep space exploratory assignment like the Enterprise-D was ... if it was, I'm sure the crew would not face resource issues so fast ... then again, the trip to the DQ damaged a lot of systems which reduced engine efficiency ... I doubt the same thing wouldn't happen to a Galaxy class).
I recall them destroying a Borg probe by transporting a Photon Torpedo on-board in an attempt to disable it.
Next, the ship managed to kill off a Borg Diamond class ship only because they fired a bunch of torpedoes into the TW conduit, forcing it to collapse (which was bound to profoundly tear the Borg ship apart).
Furthermore, they were able to disable a Cube run by Borg children who were out of their maturation chambers prematurely and probably possessed limited tactical knowledge.
In Unimatrix Zero, Voyager was going up against a Tactical Cube, which was able to penetrate it's shields rather fast and inflict moderate damage (7 probably also contributed), then initiated a final assault with the help of a resistance Sphere which was providing heavy support, and the Tactical Cube only ended up destroyed because the Queen ordered self-destruct.
Also, Voyager did not spend all of it's original torpedoes halfway through Season 1 ... I think that happened by the end or mid Season 3 ... and as we already established, off-screen resupplying of resources and possible construction of new torpedoes likely took place (they traded enough times even on-screen to theorize they would be smart enough to requisition anti-matter supplies and manufactured parts for torpedoes themsevles, or they simply made them on the go).
Voyager had a smaller crew in contrast to what a Galaxy class had, so it stands to reason there would be fewer family starters.
They weren't exactly under ideal circumstances where raising kids was viable (although, when Kes was still aboard and she experienced time shifting from the future into the past, we have seen at the very least in that future her family grew ... and who knows how many others) and Voyager started with the short-cuts home when Kes left.
If a Galaxy class has more room for resource/food storage, it would be appropriate for the ratio of consumption.
Intrepid class stocked to the full is more than able to cater to all it's crew without a hitch (problem was, the ship was initially launched for a 2 weeks mission and not a deep space exploratory assignment like the Enterprise-D was ... if it was, I'm sure the crew would not face resource issues so fast ... then again, the trip to the DQ damaged a lot of systems which reduced engine efficiency ... I doubt the same thing wouldn't happen to a Galaxy class).
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