Does anyone know how long a Galaxy-class could cruise nonstop at Warp 7 and Warp 8?
Thanks!
Thanks!

I really don't think there's a problem here because it probably comes down to an issue of semantics or using different terminology to describe the same thing.
"Sustainable cruise velocity" = "maximum velocity"
Regardless of how you call it, it pretty much means "pedal to the metal" and not something any ship can maintain indefinitely, but definitely useful for covering relatively short distances--which could be anything up to a couple of sectors--very quickly.
Not necessarily. A ship's normal cruising speed (which I earlier suggested was warp 6) would fall under that category, but Stadi could be (and probably is) referring to the fastest velocity the ship can sustain period.I really don't think there's a problem here because it probably comes down to an issue of semantics or using different terminology to describe the same thing.
"Sustainable cruise velocity" = "maximum velocity"
Regardless of how you call it, it pretty much means "pedal to the metal" and not something any ship can maintain indefinitely, but definitely useful for covering relatively short distances--which could be anything up to a couple of sectors--very quickly.
Say what? Sustainable cruise is a long term speed that is efficient and doesn't cause damage.
What we know for a fact is that Voyager was always on the verge of falling apart when attempting speeds past warp 9 - and that she virtually never attempted those (probably because of the above fact). "Threshold" is a good example of this.
This leads me to think that the "sustainable cruise speed" of warp 9.975 is some sort of a semantic misunderstanding that does not translate to an ability to sustain warp 9.975 for any appreciable length of time. That is, warp 9.975 for Voyager is what warp 9.8 is for the Enterprise-D - something the designers consider achievable, but the onboard engineers consider suicide if sustained past a few minutes.
Timo Saloniemi
"Threshold" episode WAS on the other hand booted out of canon, so that doesn't count any more.
If the ship is not performing up to specs, then it has no business being launched in the first place.
But Star-Fleet ships tend to perform up to specs all the time.
At least they did before Voyager aired.
And we also know that the only reason Voyager never really performed up to specs in terms of Warp speeds is because of the writers.
fact remains it wasn't acknowledged later in Voyager and was booted out of canon.
I think warp 6 is sorta the normal cruising speed for most Federation starships, and a vessel could probably cruise at that velocity indefinitely as long as it has enough fuel.
Beyond warp 6, however, I think the greater the strain on the engines and the shorter a ship can maintain those speeds before something burns out. Warp 7 and warp 8 are probably still within the safety zone, but are still likely considered high warp speeds, IMO. How long a Galaxy-class ship can maintain those speeds (before suffering engine damage) is anyone's guess, IMO...
Well, from the TNG Tech Manual, it carries 3 years of fuel and cruises at Warp 9.2.
Warp 9.2 uses roughly 10^9 megajoules per chochrane, and is, according to the encyclopedia, 1649 cochranes, so that's 1.649*10^12 megajoules.
Warp 7 is 656 cochranes, and warp 8 is 1024 cochranes, but the power per cochrane goes down too. Roughly 10^7.2 for Warp7, 10^8 for warp 8.
Which suggests that the fuel would last more than 1000 times as long at warp 8 as it does at warp 9.2.
Edit: slipped a decimal: only 10 times as long.
But that's just fuel.
The DS9 Technical Manual says that no Federation ship has ever covered 1000 lightyears in a single year. That would mean that the Galaxy Class cruising at Warp 9.2 must spend about 1/3 of the time with the engines shut down, at least.
While running the engines continuously at warp 7, or almost continuously at warp 8, would still be slow enough to not break that barrier, odds are they still require significant down-time even at slower speeds. I'd be surprised if you could travel at warp 8 continuously for more than a few months, or for more than 11 months out of 12.
Time spent out of warp doing repairs/maintenance would save fuel, of course. But the estimate of "3 years" fuel probably took that into account for projected warp 9.2 travel, so at warp 8 the ship would actually be using more fuel than my projections above, because it would be spending less time with the engines off.
Mostly guesswork, and depends on which books you want to count as "canon".
Hope this helps.
You mean 438 light-years per year, according to Star Charts. That would place her cruising more around Warp 6.2 according to the TNG scale.I think warp 6 is sorta the normal cruising speed for most Federation starships, and a vessel could probably cruise at that velocity indefinitely as long as it has enough fuel.
Beyond warp 6, however, I think the greater the strain on the engines and the shorter a ship can maintain those speeds before something burns out. Warp 7 and warp 8 are probably still within the safety zone, but are still likely considered high warp speeds, IMO. How long a Galaxy-class ship can maintain those speeds (before suffering engine damage) is anyone's guess, IMO...
VOYAGER traveled 738 light years a year according to the Star Charts and it's normal cruise veolicty was warp 6.
But 738 light years in a year is approximately warp 7.24
pretty consistent...
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