In the future, we won't need to have debates on Trek Tech. Our iPods could do it for us.
In the future, we won't need to have debates on Trek Tech. Our iPods could do it for us.
Except it still doesn't make any sense. It looks like he's just sitting back and watching right after the whole plot contrivance of the autopilot being down was just established.Because, dramatically, it was more important to reinforce the idea that Kirk was The Captain Of The Ship by having him sit in the Chair where which the Captain places his self.
Space doesn't have bumps and variances in its surface the way a road does, and starships don't have to worry about the air pressure being a little different in each tire, or the balance in the rims being a little off, or the alignment of the suspension being a little off. It's not even like an ocean or other body of water where currents and wind speed and direction can throw off an otherwise straight course of a boat or a ship. Here the only thing to throw the ship off are the missile impacts, and that depends on how many get through the defenses. There's also the fact that the ship is practically there already when it starts its collision course. At that distance, there isn't a lot that can happen to prevent a collision from happening between those two ships. Even the Narda attempting to take evasive action instead of just trying to blow the ship up wouldn't have done much to help it, and even if they'd blown the ship up, guess what, the debris which still makes up the total of the ship's mass is still headed at high speed toward them.Dare you to take your hands off the wheel next time you're on the freeway and see how simple it is to keep going in a straight line for any significant distance traveling at high speed.
Where 9/10 anime girls fear to tread.He flew the Kelvin inside the Narada's tentacles,
to strike at the core of the ship. Any evasive action not countered would have led George to crash into one of Narada's limbs and caused far less damage.
Not to mention that the Kelvin was falling physically apart. Her flight characteristics must have been constantly changing...
If that was the case, then why wasn't he at the helm, where the best controls for making any adjustments were?
Because this isn't supposed to be a video game, it's supposed to be a ship, and the helm controls would provide better controls than whatever abbreviated versions are built into the captain's chair, if there were indeed any controls there. In any case, if having control of the ship at all times is so important to insure this collision happens, then he never should have left the helm once starting on that course.Why get steering wheel for a PS3 when the little left thumbstick on the pad works just as well? Besides, we saw him set a load of controls on the helm and nav consoles, which are all of two footsteps away if needed.
Or at the helm or anywhere else where he or she might be needed for that matter. I can think of two examples of the captain piloting the ship off the top of my head: Picard in "Booby Trap" and Archer in "Singularity."Because the Captain sits in the Captain's chair,
Does pointing out flaws in other movies somehow make the flaws in the movie you're defending disappear? Or are you under the mistaken impression that I would never point out such flaws in other movies?You may as well ask why everyone had their back to their consoles or was standing next to Jim at the end of Star Treks IV and VI (and, more than that, why there was no helmsman at the end of VI!), like they were posing for a photo. Didn't they have jobs to do? Did someone tell them it was the end of the movie and they should all get a last bit of face-time?
I don't see why George Kirk would desire to use "the most complete set of controls". He was alone in command of a starship - having to worry about a thousand nuances would be counterproductive to what he was doing.
He only NEEDED the autopilot to keep the ship performing evasive maneuvers until everyone was off. A collision course can be set pretty easily, but a series of random evasive maneuvers (and covering moves to protect the shuttles) requires multiple course changes or manual thruster input.Except it still doesn't make any sense. It looks like he's just sitting back and watching right after the whole plot contrivance of the autopilot being down was just established.Because, dramatically, it was more important to reinforce the idea that Kirk was The Captain Of The Ship by having him sit in the Chair where which the Captain places his self.
Which, again, assumes that he intended to use the autopilot to plot a collision course. He didn't: the autopilot was for the protection of the shuttles, and its untimely failure means George stays on the bridge until his wife is away.Space doesn't have bumps and variances in its surface the way a road does, and starships don't have to worry about the air pressure being a little different in each tire, or the balance in the rims being a little off, or the alignment of the suspension being a little off. It's not even like an ocean or other body of water where currents and wind speed and direction can throw off an otherwise straight course of a boat or a ship. Here the only thing to throw the ship off are the missile impacts, and that depends on how many get through the defenses. There's also the fact that the ship is practically there already when it starts its collision course.
Does pointing out flaws in other movies somehow make the flaws in the movie you're defending disappear? Or are you under the mistaken impression that I would never point out such flaws in other movies?
Which then would go back to it making no sense that he ever left the helm.He only NEEDED the autopilot to keep the ship performing evasive maneuvers until everyone was off. A collision course can be set pretty easily, but a series of random evasive maneuvers (and covering moves to protect the shuttles) requires multiple course changes or manual thruster input.
Anyway, George specifically tells Winona that his reason for staying on the ship isn't so he can ram the Narada, but so he can draw Narada's fire long enough for the shuttles to escape. I think if he had his choice he would have preferred to run for it and maybe gamble on hooking up with the shuttles at the nearest starbase, but he didn't have his choice, and the only way to keep Nero from pursuing the survivors was to shove the Kelvin down his throat.
]Which, again, assumes that he intended to use the autopilot to plot a collision course. He didn't: the autopilot was for the protection of the shuttles, and its untimely failure means George stays on the bridge until his wife is away.
Probably because they've all been discussions about STXI. So again: 1) Does pointing out such flaws in other movies suddenly make the flaws in this one go away? 2) Do you honestly think I've never noticed or complained about flaws in other movies, ever?You know, I've seen you posting in twelve different threads and I have NEVER seen you draw attention to plot/technical/characterization flaws in any movie OTHER than STXI.
Why? He DIDN'T leave the helm until the ship was already on a collision course; not much steering to do then, now is there?Which then would go back to it making no sense that he ever left the helm.He only NEEDED the autopilot to keep the ship performing evasive maneuvers until everyone was off. A collision course can be set pretty easily, but a series of random evasive maneuvers (and covering moves to protect the shuttles) requires multiple course changes or manual thruster input.
Anyway, George specifically tells Winona that his reason for staying on the ship isn't so he can ram the Narada, but so he can draw Narada's fire long enough for the shuttles to escape. I think if he had his choice he would have preferred to run for it and maybe gamble on hooking up with the shuttles at the nearest starbase, but he didn't have his choice, and the only way to keep Nero from pursuing the survivors was to shove the Kelvin down his throat.
]Which, again, assumes that he intended to use the autopilot to plot a collision course. He didn't: the autopilot was for the protection of the shuttles, and its untimely failure means George stays on the bridge until his wife is away.
No, it makes it exactly as irrelevant as it was in all those other movies you don't feel like talking about because you liked them just fine but would rather complain about STXI because you hated it so much.Probably because they've all been discussions about STXI. So again: 1) Does pointing out such flaws in other movies suddenly make the flaws in this one go away?
The warp drive doesn't produce thrust in the Newtonian sense, it manipulates space by forming a warp field around the ship.
I know that... I am well versed in technobabble. I am also an engineer with much knowings of engines and things nuclear and general "engineering" in general.
Follow my design logic for a moment.
These are older generation warp engines. In order to scale up the NX engines it was necessary to use a brute-force approach. While the NX was able to recycle warp-plasma for the most part... larger ships required more plasma. Technology wasn't up to the task of "recycling" the plasma on this scale yet.
What we see on these ships very simple: It's the exhaust-pipe Uhura spoke of.
When we cycle the engines up to power more plasma is generated and exhausted overboard. The design of the nozzle disperses the plasma as best it can so it DOES NOT impart a Newtonian trust to the ship.
Enterprising captains (heh) discovered that by adjusting the configuration of the exhaust nozzle you could get an additional bit of thrust... and there were even stories circulating about how ships who lost their impulse drives used the "rocket thrust" of the plasma-exhaust to limp to safety.
Later on... a tech generation or two ahead of this one... look at the end-caps on the TOS Enterprise nacelles. A method was developed to recycle and reuse said plasma. This reduced the trail that Starfleet ships left behind and eliminated the toxic "plasma contamination" issues some well-traveled space-ports and starbases were facing.
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