TM suggests that the length matters, which is then backed by oncreen evidence of charge going around the array. When Enterprise fires multiple weak shots, there is not charge. Makes perfect sense.
If a portion of a strip could be destroyed in battle, but leave the remainder operational, that would be an advantage over having your phaser power come from a small number of "points' on the ships hull. The bigger your array, the harder it is to target weapons.negates the whole "longer strips for better coverage" idea
I was wondering this myself.When?'Main phaser array' was referred to as the 'saucer based arrays',
^ Or the effect you see in the long array is a delay in getting the phaser energy from the end of the strip to the firing point.
As to the multiple shots, how do we know they are weak shots? Was it identified in the episode?
For the very few sneak attacks actually executed, yes, and most of the remainder were performed by people who had ZERO reason to worry about their opponent's return fire.Are you sure about the attack direction?
There was Elaan of Troyus, where the Klingon ship consistently attacked the Enterprise from its port-rear side. In this case, though, the Klingon ship was only ABLE to do this because the Enterprise lacked maneuvering power.The times when a starship opponent fighting the TOS / TMP Enterprise could control the attack direction we didn't see them sneaking up on the Enterprise from the lower aft. (Original TOS FX referenced.)
And at no point in this entire exchange did the Orion ship have any reason to worry about Enterprise's return fire."Journey to Babel" - Orion ship strafed them consistently at high rate of speed from high to low, approaching even from the front of Enterprise. Even when the Enterprise was thought to be crippled, approached from the front of Enterprise.
TSFS is hard to interpret in this context since Kruge didn't believe Enterprise saw him coming; an inexperienced captain like Esteban would have done a whole "WTF? Try to analyze that distortion thingie... hmmm... what do you make of it?" before having his engines shot out from under him."The Search for Spock" - Kruge's BOP decloaked head-on with the Enterprise. (But they did decloaked and attacked the Grissom from behind.)
And Enterprise never fired her phasers at any point in the battle."The Undiscovered Country" - Chang's BOP attacked from all directions.
That's likely a dialog error since a "variance" of 60GW is a ridiculous thing to have to worry about (it's the equivalent of detonating a very large bomb and not being sure if it'll go off like a mouse fart or level three city blocks). Unless you expect us to believe Enterprise has no reliable way of controlling the power levels of its main weapons, the only way you could really interpret that line is in terms of what the phaser beam is doing to the atmosphere in terms of the chain reaction they were trying to set off, in which case you're talking about a reaction whose total output could be thousands of terawatts and "plus or minus point six" is a very small margin for error.Well, the TM has it's own problems like writing the total output for the top phaser array on the E-D to be 1 GW yet in "A Matter of Time" the phasers were being fired with a variance no more than .06 TeraWatts (60 GW) which is significantly more powerful on air than published.
If nothing on-air contradicts it, the TM's information is still entirely valid, as has been the rule of thumb for this board for the last several years. And you know this perfectly well.So, you can cite the TM but I'll just stick with the on-air stuff to not have to deal with even more potential contradictions.
As far as TNG, there are almost no on-air scenes of the aft phasers being fired AT ALL. The few times they show up in Voyager are always against smaller targets with no comparable strike from the main banks. In the end, then, there isn't anything to CONTRADICT the theory, and we're back to the logical problem you keep trying to swim around: if the longer strips provide no tangible benefit, then why have them at all?Since there are no on-aired scenes of the short phaser strips doing less damage (AFAIK) than the longer phaser strips then I see no reason that they are less powerful.
But deciding which is which needs to be more than just a matter of personal taste. This is the main reason we have always considered the Tech Manual to be "canon unless contradicted on screen," because it avoids the temptation to start pulling ad hoc theories out of our collective asses and then label them "canon" despite the mountains of contravening evidence that we don't like.One has to know which evidence to include and which to discard.
For the very few sneak attacks actually executed, yes, and most of the remainder were performed by people who had ZERO reason to worry about their opponent's return fire.Are you sure about the attack direction?
There was Elaan of Troyus, where the Klingon ship consistently attacked the Enterprise from its port-rear side. In this case, though, the Klingon ship was only ABLE to do this because the Enterprise lacked maneuvering power.
And at no point in this entire exchange did the Orion ship have any reason to worry about Enterprise's return fire.
TSFS is hard to interpret in this context since Kruge didn't believe Enterprise saw him coming; an inexperienced captain like Esteban would have done a whole "WTF? Try to analyze that distortion thingie... hmmm... what do you make of it?" before having his engines shot out from under him.
On the other hand, Enterprise opened with torpedoes, not phasers, evidently because only the torpedoes could be targeted and fired fast enough to make the shot. If Kruge HAD attacked from the rear aspect he would have had better luck whether the aft phasers were weaker or not.
And Enterprise never fired her phasers at any point in the battle."The Undiscovered Country" - Chang's BOP attacked from all directions.
This is kind of my point about the sneak attack aspect. When you're being sucker-punched by an aggressive foe, your quick-draw weapon is actually photon torpedoes, not phasers. Not all starships even HAVE aft torpedo launchers, which lends some credibility to the thought that starships do not usually turn their backs to their opponents if they can help it.
"The Wounded," for one, and also apparently in "Face of the Enemy" where the Romulan warbird moves directly beneath the Enterprise as a way of judging whether or not the ship's sensors can see them. There's also the Klingon attack in "Yesterday's Enterprise" where the Klingon ship seems to be focussing its attention directly on the Enterprise-C, attacking from starboard slightly aft. The second time the Klingons attack, Enterprise intentionally turns in space to face them and bring its forward torpedoes and phasers to bear. When the Klingons go after Enterprise-C, the -D moves to put itself between them to allow the smaller ship to escape... and yet, still only fires off the main phasers in the saucer, NOT the smaller arrays.For the very few sneak attacks actually executed, yes, and most of the remainder were performed by people who had ZERO reason to worry about their opponent's return fire.Are you sure about the attack direction?
So which episodes do we see these "sneak attacks" executed from below and aft of the Enterprise?
Because "where are their phasers?" is VASTLY less important than "where are their shields weakest" or "Where are their primary systems located?" If YOU don't have to worry about return fire--either because your shields are holding, or you can dodge his fire, or you've sabotaged his power systems somehow--then your most effective tactic is in figuring out where are his shields weakest and what part of his ship is most vulnerable to attack.Even then, why not perform the coup de'grace from the aft or side rather than approach the front of the ship?
That's not a scenario, it's just something we've seen often enough. In Kruge's case, he was depending on the Enterprise not seeing him coming. It's not as if he decloaked into a hail of phaser fire and thought "Gee, I should have attacked from behind where their weapons were weaker." His actual mistake was loosing the element of surprise, without which it wouldn't have mattered where he attacked from because Enterprise still would have nailed him.Kruge attacked the Grissom from behind, but the Enterprise from straight ahead. Certainly doesn't follow the "attack from below aft" scenario.
"All power to the weapons" isn't that specific. Scotty had his pick and he chose torpedoes, evidently because they could do more damage faster with less reliable targeting. They did the same thing in "TWOK" when they needed to sucker-punch Reliant without inviting a return fire, and again in TUC when they needed to take out the bird of prey quickly before it could recover. Riker apparently did the same thing in "Generations" while attacking the Duras sisters, and there's Enterprise-E firing blindly into space with phasers, only to switch to torpedoes the moment Scimitar became (briefly) visible.Or the torpedoes were cheaper to arm or harder for the Klingons to detect armed.
Which would make a disparity between main and secondary phasers kind of irrelevant. You wouldn't normally be using phsaers anyway when heavily engaged, so you wouldn't need especially powerful weapons except directly up front to be used in strafing attacks against soft targets.Or the Enterprise's power was likely used up by the shields ala "The Changeling" leaving only power for torpedoes.
And if forward shields are stronger anyway--making this a "preferred" attack aspect in such situations--when is the utility of powerful rear-facing phasers that are rarely used and aren't neccesary anyway since the forward phasers can just as easily be brought to bear on a rearward target?I'd argue that the quick-draw weapon could be either phasers or torpedoes, depending on power available. I do agree that starships like the Enterprise would prefer to fight facing their enemy but more on the grounds that the forward shields are likely stronger and they can present a minimum target profile.
That's likely a dialog error since a "variance" of 60GW is a ridiculous thing to have to worry about (it's the equivalent of detonating a very large bomb and not being sure if it'll go off like a mouse fart or level three city blocks). Unless you expect us to believe Enterprise has no reliable way of controlling the power levels of its main weapons,Well, the TM has it's own problems like writing the total output for the top phaser array on the E-D to be 1 GW yet in "A Matter of Time" the phasers were being fired with a variance no more than .06 TeraWatts (60 GW) which is significantly more powerful on air than published.
If nothing on-air contradicts it, the TM's information is still entirely valid, as has been the rule of thumb for this board for the last several years. And you know this perfectly well.So, you can cite the TM but I'll just stick with the on-air stuff to not have to deal with even more potential contradictions.
As far as TNG, there are almost no on-air scenes of the aft phasers being fired AT ALL.Since there are no on-aired scenes of the short phaser strips doing less damage (AFAIK) than the longer phaser strips then I see no reason that they are less powerful.
The few times they show up in Voyager are always against smaller targets with no comparable strike from the main banks.
In the end, then, there isn't anything to CONTRADICT the theory, and we're back to the logical problem you keep trying to swim around: if the longer strips provide no tangible benefit, then why have them at all?
"The Wounded," for one,
and also apparently in "Face of the Enemy" where the Romulan warbird moves directly beneath the Enterprise as a way of judging whether or not the ship's sensors can see them.
There's also the Klingon attack in "Yesterday's Enterprise" where the Klingon ship seems to be focussing its attention directly on the Enterprise-C, attacking from starboard slightly aft. The second time the Klingons attack, Enterprise intentionally turns in space to face them and bring its forward torpedoes and phasers to bear. When the Klingons go after Enterprise-C, the -D moves to put itself between them to allow the smaller ship to escape... and yet, still only fires off the main phasers in the saucer, NOT the smaller arrays.
This occurs again in "Rascals," which uses stock footage from both "The Wounded" and "Yesterday's Enterprise" to show Enterprise being ambushed from both the front AND the rear by the stolen Klingon ships. Again, Enterprise never actually fires any of its smaller arrays and only ever uses the main phasers against the forward target. This may be due to use of stock footage from "Yesterday's Enterprise", but it's a point nonetheless.
Because "where are their phasers?" is VASTLY less important than "where are their shields weakest" or "Where are their primary systems located?" If YOU don't have to worry about return fire--either because your shields are holding, or you can dodge his fire, or you've sabotaged his power systems somehow--then your most effective tactic is in figuring out where are his shields weakest and what part of his ship is most vulnerable to attack.
That's not a scenario, it's just something we've seen often enough. In Kruge's case, he was depending on the Enterprise not seeing him coming. It's not as if he decloaked into a hail of phaser fire and thought "Gee, I should have attacked from behind where their weapons were weaker." His actual mistake was loosing the element of surprise, without which it wouldn't have mattered where he attacked from because Enterprise still would have nailed him.
"All power to the weapons" isn't that specific. Scotty had his pick and he chose torpedoes, evidently because they could do more damage faster with less reliable targeting.
They did the same thing in "TWOK" when they needed to sucker-punch Reliant without inviting a return fire,
and again in TUC when they needed to take out the bird of prey quickly before it could recover.
Riker apparently did the same thing in "Generations" while attacking the Duras sisters, and there's Enterprise-E firing blindly into space with phasers, only to switch to torpedoes the moment Scimitar became (briefly) visible.
The overall pattern is that torpedoes are the go-to weapon when you're in WAY over your head. And, again, many ships do not even have aft torpedo launchers, suggesting that starships aren't meant to fight enemies over their shoulders.
Which would make a disparity between main and secondary phasers kind of irrelevant. You wouldn't normally be using phsaers anyway when heavily engaged, so you wouldn't need especially powerful weapons except directly up front to be used in strafing attacks against soft targets.Or the Enterprise's power was likely used up by the shields ala "The Changeling" leaving only power for torpedoes.
And if forward shields are stronger anyway--making this a "preferred" attack aspect in such situations--when is the utility of powerful rear-facing phasers that are rarely used and aren't neccesary anyway since the forward phasers can just as easily be brought to bear on a rearward target?
That is highly improbable. "off by 60GW" is a pretty fucking huge thing not to be able to control.That's likely a dialog error since a "variance" of 60GW is a ridiculous thing to have to worry about (it's the equivalent of detonating a very large bomb and not being sure if it'll go off like a mouse fart or level three city blocks). Unless you expect us to believe Enterprise has no reliable way of controlling the power levels of its main weapons,Well, the TM has it's own problems like writing the total output for the top phaser array on the E-D to be 1 GW yet in "A Matter of Time" the phasers were being fired with a variance no more than .06 TeraWatts (60 GW) which is significantly more powerful on air than published.
Well, the dialogue certainly points to the possibility that the phaser output might be off by up to 60 GW and not a dialogue error.
"Follows the show?" the manual was written by the people who PRODUCED the show. If anything, the show mostly follows the manual, not the other way around.No. Actually I don't reference the TM just to avoid this silliness. When a TM that actually follows the show is put out, then I'd be happy to reference it
That's the first thing that comes to mind in this case. Evidently the only thing in the world scary enough to make them fire their secondary phasers is, in fact, a Borg cube in the middle of a killgasm.As you said, almost no on-air scenes. But there is one that happens to be when they fire all weapons at the Borg.
It isn't power output as much as a qualitative difference. There is the tech manual's direct reference, and occasional references to "main phasers" being distinct from "non-main" phasers. Power output is one possible explanation for the difference, as are endurance, accuracy and firing range (the tech manual implies that the longer strip is capable of sustaining a phaser beam longer than the shorter ones by discharging a larger number of emitters throughout the firing sequence). One way or another, there IS a qualitative difference between the two, we're just not sure what it is.Yet there is nothing to SUPPORT the theory that phaser array length = power output either.
Because a larger number of shorter strips would accomplish that as well, though probably better since multiple strips could be fired at the same target.Why not acknowledge longer strips could mean more redundancy or continuous phaser coverage as benefits?
Input and output are not the same thing. In this case, a generator that is 50% efficient feeding a phaser that is 25% efficient would have an output of about 500MW.If you were to go by the TM, with each emitter being 5 MW and the TM's stated 200 emitters on the top saucer phaser array then the max output is 1GW for that phaser array. From "Who Watches the Watchers"LAFORGE: We've finished replicating the parts they'll need, but what I don't understand is why a three man station would need a reactor capable of producing four point two gigawatts.So I guess that long phaser array on the E-D is a "tiny" phaser bank then
RIKER: Enough to power a small phaser bank, a subspace relay station, or
![]()
I do not immediately see why that would be a problem. Actually, it tells us a lot more about the phaser rifles than it does about the Enterprise' phaser banks.Or "The Mind's Eye" where a phaser rifle's energy cell was discharging 1MW. 5 of these would be equal in power to a single TM phaser emitter.
Sounds like a pitch for Mythbusters: Star Trek edition.When all is lost, just have a bunch of guys with phaser rifles strapped to the hull as backup phasers![]()
It DIDN'T, though, which makes this discussion kind of immaterial.From behind yes, but not below. The saucer's top phaser array could've hit the aft BOP.
Not in the slightest. Again, any attack you have planned has to take into account the possibility of return fire and take that into account. If your chance of success depends in any way on their NOT finding a way to bring their main phasers to bear on you, then you are already in way over your head even if none of his aft phasers are working.However, if the theory is that phaser array length = phaser strength then "Where are their phasers" becomes mighty important.
Actually, it's more likely because most people either don't KNOW about it, or don't care. It's just not a big enough advantage to exploit unless you're either desperate or really really inexperienced and can't think of a better idea.However, we just don't see that being exploited and that is likely because phaser output is the same whether it is from the aft emitter or the forward one.
Yes it does: because Kruge had no intention of receiving return fire of ANY kind, so he didn't know or care where Enterprise's main phasers were pointing.That still doesn't explain why he didn't sneak up from below and aft.
Yes, that one. His very first shot was a torpedo hit, disabling Reliant's torpedo launcher and removing the other ship's ability to quickly return fire (as Reliant did the FIRST time Enterprise attacked from behind). Then they followed up with phasers and another torpedo hit.You mean in the end battle where the Enterprise had to be taken off of her "partial main power" and was running on what's left of her batteries (or auxiliaries, depending on your interpretation)?
Yeah, but THEY didn't know that, and they couldn't take the chance of Chang getting his shields up and attacking EnterpriseFunny enough, I think that first torpedo mission killed Chang's BOP. The rest were kinda unnecessary
Exactly. Riker says "We have to target them the moment they cloak." You'd think phasers would be more effective in this situation, but apparently torpedoes are better off when there's no visible target.In "Generations" it's weird because they stopped firing phasers after the first shot, like they just gave up. And they waited for the shield trick to work on the Duras BOP before firing the torpedoes
True, but two times we see Enterprise falling back on torpedoes when it really needs to be quick: once, when Picard fires blindly with phasers to locate Scimitar and then follows up with torpedoes, and later, when Troi telepathically targets them and fires a spread of quantum torpedoes.The E-E battle with the Scimitar was just all over the place.
All true, but I don't see that being inconsistent with the "main phasers are forward" idea. Starships generally avoid turning their back on anything they're planning to shoot at, so secondary phasers wouldn't normally even come into play unless you are fighting at suicidally close range and every little bit helps.It depends on the enemy. An enemy that can pour enough continuous weapons fire on your shields could cause the shields to suck up so much power that your phaser output would be diminished. However, if there are gaps in fire or the enemy weapons are on par with yours, then that spare energy could be dumped into the phaser attack which seems to be the preferred go to weapon against shielded and unshielded targets at both warp and sublight.
Or some combination thereof. Either way, there's got to be some concrete reason why starships PREFER to face their enemies instead of trying to fire broadsides. Granted that forward and aft shields are probably equal, but that again leaves us to wonder about "main" and "secondary" phasers.After looking again, I don't think that in TOS that the forward shields are any stronger than the aft shields. I don't see any dialogue to indicate stronger forward shields. It might just be a minimum target profile or that's where the ship points to when accelerating at warp. Or to keep the warp pods/nacelles from getting directly hit by keeping the saucer more or less in the line of fire...
That is highly improbable. "off by 60GW" is a pretty fucking huge thing not to be able to control.That's likely a dialog error since a "variance" of 60GW is a ridiculous thing to have to worry about (it's the equivalent of detonating a very large bomb and not being sure if it'll go off like a mouse fart or level three city blocks). Unless you expect us to believe Enterprise has no reliable way of controlling the power levels of its main weapons,
Well, the dialogue certainly points to the possibility that the phaser output might be off by up to 60 GW and not a dialogue error.
"Follows the show?" the manual was written by the people who PRODUCED the show. If anything, the show mostly follows the manual, not the other way around.
That's the first thing that comes to mind in this case. Evidently the only thing in the world scary enough to make them fire their secondary phasers is, in fact, a Borg cube in the middle of a killgasm.
It isn't power output as much as a qualitative difference. There is the tech manual's direct reference, and occasional references to "main phasers" being distinct from "non-main" phasers. Power output is one possible explanation for the difference, as are endurance, accuracy and firing range (the tech manual implies that the longer strip is capable of sustaining a phaser beam longer than the shorter ones by discharging a larger number of emitters throughout the firing sequence). One way or another, there IS a qualitative difference between the two, we're just not sure what it is.
If you don't think it's firepower, that leaves other possibilities, but "nothing" isn't one of them.
Because a larger number of shorter strips would accomplish that as well, though probably better since multiple strips could be fired at the same target.
Input and output are not the same thing. In this case, a generator that is 50% efficient feeding a phaser that is 25% efficient would have an output of about 500MW.
In this context, a "small phaser bank" is probably the Type-8 that the Cardassians were complaining about.
I do not immediately see why that would be a problem. Actually, it tells us a lot more about the phaser rifles than it does about the Enterprise' phaser banks.Or "The Mind's Eye" where a phaser rifle's energy cell was discharging 1MW. 5 of these would be equal in power to a single TM phaser emitter.
Sounds like a pitch for Mythbusters: Star Trek edition.When all is lost, just have a bunch of guys with phaser rifles strapped to the hull as backup phasers![]()
Seriously, though: why not? Get 500 gets on the hull with some phaser rifles and get them to all fire at the same target at maximum power... infeasible for tactical reasons, but I could see them shooting down a Bird of Prey or a Jem'hadar battle bug if they hit it just right.
It DIDN'T, though, which makes this discussion kind of immaterial.From behind yes, but not below. The saucer's top phaser array could've hit the aft BOP.
Not in the slightest. Again, any attack you have planned has to take into account the possibility of return fire and take that into account. If your chance of success depends in any way on their NOT finding a way to bring their main phasers to bear on you, then you are already in way over your head even if none of his aft phasers are working.However, if the theory is that phaser array length = phaser strength then "Where are their phasers" becomes mighty important.
Yes it does: because Kruge had no intention of receiving return fire of ANY kind, so he didn't know or care where Enterprise's main phasers were pointing.
Minor science quibble: for two co-orbiting vessels closing on a single point, neither of them can really control their approach axis. Kruge probably would have PREFERRED to attack from behind, considering he was targeting Enterprise' engines, but since Enterprise wasn't flying backwards that day, he didn't have a choice.
Yes, that one. His very first shot was a torpedo hit, disabling Reliant's torpedo launcher and removing the other ship's ability to quickly return fire (as Reliant did the FIRST time Enterprise attacked from behind). Then they followed up with phasers and another torpedo hit.
So photon torpedoes are the weapon of choice when you need to fire off a quick shot and can't be sure of a weapons lock.
Exactly. Riker says "We have to target them the moment they cloak." You'd think phasers would be more effective in this situation, but apparently torpedoes are better off when there's no visible target.
True, but two times we see Enterprise falling back on torpedoes when it really needs to be quick: once, when Picard fires blindly with phasers to locate Scimitar and then follows up with torpedoes, and later, when Troi telepathically targets them and fires a spread of quantum torpedoes.
Either way, there's got to be some concrete reason why starships PREFER to face their enemies instead of trying to fire broadsides. Granted that forward and aft shields are probably equal, but that again leaves us to wonder about "main" and "secondary" phasers.
It's funny that this sole example of short strips being fired in TNG is actually an example of short strips not being fired! As has often been pointed out, the beams appear to come either from the leading edges of the engine pylons, or then from the insides of the pylons, and neither location actually features any strips. (The starboard pylon outside strip is blatantly visible in the shot, and quite distant from the starting point of the beam).Evidently the only thing in the world scary enough to make them fire their secondary phasers is, in fact, a Borg cube in the middle of a killgasm.
We don't really know that, because there were so many cuts in the scene - to the interior (where phaser shots only manifest as small "pings" in the loudspeaker system), and to Picard's surface exploits. With their penetration advantage, the Klingons could have knocked out Riker's phaser arrays one by one, ultimately leading to the stern chase situation where none of Riker's surviving beam weapons could fire aft...The E-D only fired one phaser blast in "Generations". Not continuously hammering the BOP. Just one.
Let's remember that the target appeared right next to the hero ship. Torpedoes are a big no-no at point blank ranges...There is also "The Arsenal of Freedom" where the first choice for a quick shot was the phaser
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.