I was watching "Hunters" the other day, and was wondering why Janeway didn't fly Voyager through every black hole they came across. I know it's dangerous and reckless, but when you're in a hopeless situation, what's there to lose?
Assuming they survived, they may have emerged closer to home. They may also have emerged in the past, the future, another dimension, another galaxy, fluidic space or whatever - but surely that would have just made for fun "Oh shit, we made it worse" episodes?
Kirk's Enterprise collided with a "black star" and he appeared in 1960's Earth orbit. The Voyager VI probe (made mostly of tin foil) survived it's trip and emerged on the other side of the galaxy. Nero and Spock arrived in the past, around Federation space.
At the start of the series, Janeway said they'd explore any option that might get them home - but it seems as though the writers, while dropping black holes into every few episodes, forgot what they're capable of (in Star Trek's world, of course
).
Assuming they survived, they may have emerged closer to home. They may also have emerged in the past, the future, another dimension, another galaxy, fluidic space or whatever - but surely that would have just made for fun "Oh shit, we made it worse" episodes?
Kirk's Enterprise collided with a "black star" and he appeared in 1960's Earth orbit. The Voyager VI probe (made mostly of tin foil) survived it's trip and emerged on the other side of the galaxy. Nero and Spock arrived in the past, around Federation space.
At the start of the series, Janeway said they'd explore any option that might get them home - but it seems as though the writers, while dropping black holes into every few episodes, forgot what they're capable of (in Star Trek's world, of course
