...not really tracking with the argument that Enterprise still didn't have auxiliary power by the end of the movie. All auxiliary power is is a cluster of fusion reactors. You don't need the fusion reactors to run the impulse engines if you have main power (the Intermix shaft powers the warp drive and the impulse engines normally).
TEMPORARILY FAILED means their failure was of little consequence... it was awhile between that report and the battle in the nebula. If they got partial main power in 2 hours, they were definitely able to get the fusion reactors back online.
@Gagarin, as far as the movie suggests, they never restored auxiliary power. When Kirk was on Regula 1, Spock's damage report indicated Main Power and Auxiliary power were down. Even though it was a "temporary failure", Spock wasn't confident that it was a sure thing to be repaired ("Restoration may be possible...").
When Kirk returns to the Enterprise, Spock only lists Main Power as being partially restored but even when pressed by Kirk, Spock never says, "Auxiliary Power, too."
For the most part I would agree, without auxiliary power they'd be running everything from "partial mains" from the heavily bypassed (and probably overloaded) main energizer. From TMP, we know that Auxiliary power can be added to the mains to supplement a struggling system (deflectors, for example) and not having it means you have nothing to fall back on if the mains are insufficient.
Clearly auxiliary power CAN be routed through the intermix, but if the mains are online you'd still have close to 100% power available; what you wouldn't have is the extra 30% the auxiliaries would provide if you suddenly needed it in a pinch.
Then what difference does it make whether Reliant's phasers were more powerful or not? Even if they were in TWOK, they wouldn't be anywhere else, and by TVH they probably weren't even phasers anymore.I'm sorry. I simply can't accept all of canon as a representation and reasoning of power or fire power for TWOK. Consistency isn't Trek's strong point.
On the one on the right right, yes. The others are either all the way up, or all the way DOWN. But since I don't believe Joachim would have accidentally set Reliant's phasers on stun, I assume they were all the way up.I see a reflection in the form of very light line at the top and nothing at the bottom.
Unless you're saying Reliant attacked Enterprise while Kirk was on the station, the temporary failure is irrelevant. Enterprise' phaser attack put Reliant's impulse engines out of operation for almost a day; Enterprise, on the other hand, was under power again after about an hour.We weren't talking about the initial failure but the temporary failure after the first restoration.
Doesn't mean they were UP either.Granted.
Yet this doesn't mean the Mains were down.
No he doesn't. He only knows that Kirk, somehow, got off of Regula-1 and back onto his ship and was now mocking him for having failed to think of something. That means Khan missed something--which pisses him off--and though he doesn't yet understand WHAT he missed, he's furious at Kirk for rubbing his nose in it.Khan knows by this point that Spock's estimates were subterfuge.
I kinda think Joachim suspected they were being lured into a trap, but couldn't explain how or why. Not that it would have made a difference for the Best of the Supermen's lunatic obsession.
That would have been lost with warp drive, actually. More to the point, "outgun" doesn't have a lot to do with power and more to do with weapon counts. With four torpedo tubes to Enterprise' two, Reliant does INDEED outgun the Enterprise even under ideal circumstances.But I think at this point after Spock says Reliant does indeed out gun them that Reliant's Main Power is functioning and indeed it was never said to have been lost.
You said "Every time Reliant hits Enterprise it takes out main power." If Reliant's phasers had nothing to do with the loss of main power the SECOND time, then this is untrue.The statement was sufficient.
At no time in the quoted did I say it was by direct cause of Reliant. (which is undetermined)
AT FULL POWER, yes. Even the derelict Constellation with no warp drive to speak of could recharge a single phaser bank (and so could Enterprise). But if your phasers are running on emergency batteries, it doesn't really matter what force setting you put them on, they're NOT going to be firing at 100% (or sometimes, at all) unless you've got a hell of a lot of power behind them.You said it depended on warp power to operate.
True, you STARTED with the conclusion that Reliant's rollbar phaser banks were initially more powerful than Enterprise' phaser banks, and this entire discussion has basically revolved around you trying to shoehorn visual and verbal evidence into that conclusion.I haven't come to a conclusion yet.
Is that still your starting assumption, or do you think maybe there's something else going on here?
When exactly does Scotty say that?Further. When asked about the mains Scott says he doesn't think they'll be getting them back...
Adequately explained by Reliant's heavier torpedo armament, four tubes to two.Spock says Reliant outguns them
This has already been analyzed by blssdwlf and found NOT to be the case.Visual evidence confirms splash radius from Reliants phasers is usually larger than Enterprise.
Yes. And nothing substantiates the claim that Reliant's phaser banks under NORMAL circumstances would be more powerful than Enterprise' phaser banks under the same conditions. The biggest reason for this is that we never do get to see what kind of damage ENTERPRISE would have done under identical conditions. And there's still the fact that Reliant's phasers AREN'T being provided with full warp power at any time, which means that as powerful as that first attack was, it could have been a hell of a lot worse.Evidence in it's broadest context is anything which may be used to substantiate a claim.
You have not provided a SHRED of evidence that they are.We don't know that.
OTOH (on the other hand) the photon torpedo loading board does not include or require a power transfer from the warp drives.
Phaser power being dependent on input power solidly falls into the category of "basics."The actuality is, the ship was completely redesign. Nothing but bare basics are the same.
Even his most speculative conclusions have been solidly grounded in precedent from TMP and prior TOS situations. That's considerably more than I can say for yours.Understood but some of his conclusions are not relying on direct inference but rather his speculation on how these systems work.
It WOULD have been, if we had seen what really happened instead of the Talosian illusion. Then again, the ground phaser bank in "the cage" did light up the entire sky behind the elevator platform, which suggests the Talosians used their combined mental effort to hide not only the destruction of the elevator, but the big fucking mushroom cloud in the distance where that phaser beam leveled a small mountain range two hundred kilometers away.Heres the problem.
The power to destroy an asteroid is a nuclear level event.
The asteroid was described as the size of Earth's moon. (ridiculous) We're talking hundreds of GIGA TONS of TNT to split that fissure. That is not what we saw in the Cage when all power is directed to the guns...

Which was the FIRST thing they tried, using the navigational deflector. Spock didn't try to use the phasers until after this had failed.but more importantly if Enterprise had GIGA TON level energy production it could physically knock the Asteroid off course...
Moreover, I think you're underestimating the amount of energy we're talking about for deflecting an object the size (and presumably the mass) of the moon. This is the sort of feat that even the Enterprise-D had trouble with more than a century later.
It is IMPLIED that the phasers were still firing for quite a while after Scotty started crying about his poor bairns. Not that it matters much, because it still means that the phasers require (and are capable of drawing) the full power of the warp engines in order to produce their maximum destructive output. Otherwise, Enterprise could have fired at that asteroid from now until doomsday and never taxed the warp drives.either the asteroid's size was ludicrously large or we are the victim of editing and there were many more sequences of phaser fire than what we saw.
Or the complete lack of a verbal report, as in the case of the Enterprise.Only a false report would necessitate a visual damage assessment.
So what? There's no reason to assume that all the damage the ship sustained would even be visible on the model. When it comes to Star Trek, it usually isn't.The key word not addressed is inconsistency.
The model did not reflect the visual report on sceen.
Enterprise didn't hit the warp propulsion system (contained in the nacelles) so it must have hit the prime mover that powered it.Not equivalent.
One is a power system the other is a propulsion system
... which means it was not available UNTIL Joachim restored it.Reliant didn't lose impulse (It was damaged)
Let me put it this way: in all of TOS, the movies and TNG, we have never seen a situation where a starship is able to maintain full shields.I can not concur.Reliant lost warp drive, which--when it comes to shields and weapons--is the same thing.
So you're saying Joachim wasn't actually REPAIRING the impulse engines, he was just degreasing the fuel lines and polishing the gaskets to a high gloss. Can't go off conquering the universe with a squeaky impulse engine, right?They never said they lost impulse power. They merely stated it was restored.

If they had the power, they'd be able to fire phasers at least. Otherwise "they've damaged the photon control and the warp drive!" doesn't work as an explanation.It means they couldn't fire, not that they didn't have power.Loss of photon control means torpedoes are out; loss of warp drives means phasers are out (thus Joachim's answer to Khan's "Fire! Fire!" is a "We can't fire, Sir!").