It doesn't, though. If your references to "A Matter of Time" and "Best of Both Worlds" have taught us anything it's that the ship can produce FAR more power than a single phaser array can safely handle. If a phaser array can only accept, say, 10% of the ship's total power output (an extremely high estimate, but still) then two could handle 20% and double the total output to the same target.The significant part you're missing here is that if a single phaser array is firing, there is still a large amount of power that could be channeled through a second, third or even fourth array to strike the same target. So "All ships power going through one array" doesn't explain the one-beam-at-a-time trend.My comment is in response to your comment: ""Discharging all the EPS taps" and "channeling all warp power" is not the same thing. It would require a major reconfiguring of the ship's engines -- as Geordi did with the deflector in Best of Both Worlds -- in order to make that possible."
The main deflector in BOBW channeled far more power than the warp core could put out as it took more than 8 seconds of power build up prior to opening fire. The phaser system on the E-D apparently cannot fire more than the ship's power output.
Or the 2nd or 3rd phaser strip firing only splits the total possible phaser output.
It isn't, though. The setup from "A Matter of Time" is explicitly unique in that it discharges all of the ship's power into a single phaser blast, which doesn't come close to the output of the main deflector dish and still represents a serious technical challenge. In a combat situation, it would be easier to simply power up an additional phaser array (which is exactly what Spock does in "Paradise Syndrome")If all the power is being channeled through a single strip
Data doesn't STATE their weapons ranges either. They both know its an approximation, considering the diagram is both two dimensional and obviously not drawn to scale.Picard ordered "weapon ranges of the two ships" and not "approximate weapon ranges of the two ships." Data doesn't correct Picard or add any qualifiers to the ranges.
More to the point, you strike me as someone who is smart enough to know what "weapons range" actually means and that directed energy weapons don't have a finite range as such; since a phaser beam doesn't just magically vanish at 300,000km, their EFFECTIVE range is a function of their targeting systems and the probability of scoring a hit at that distance. "Firing range" isn't a magic sphere within which your weapons work and outside of which they instantly cease, and "exact firing range" is an oxymoron even for weapons like missiles and cannons that (in gravity, at least) DO have a finite range.
Since they all knew it was an approximation, why would they bother? The only one who ever bothered with that kind of precision is Data, and he stopped doing it by season 2 after it was pointed out to him that most people found it really annoying.No one on the bridge qualified the graphics as an "estimated firing range"
Assuming, of course, that they're only moving in two dimensions (as per the graphic on screen).If Data and the overlay can show us which direction a ship is moving and that they are taking evasive maneuvers, the power status of the Phoenix's weapons and when the ships are firing at each other then they know which direction the ships are facing.
"Ascertain that it does not"? Trying to prove a negative again. The weapon emplacements on the Bird of Prey aren't exactly subtle; we haven't seen anything on it that looks like an aft disruptor weapon, and even if it has one, it isn't nearly as large or as powerful as the wingtip weapons.We've only seen the 23rd century Klingon BOP in 4 movies of which in TVH it isn't even in combat. That's hardly any time to ascertain that it does not have aft weapons.
Then why don't they use their beam phasers against the Klingons, the Borg, the Cardassians and the Lakota?I do believe that the Defiant's beam phasers can be just as powerful as the four pulse cannons. The pulse phasers appear to be more effective against the Jem'hedar.
The phaser power must be coming from more than the fusion reactors. In "Galaxy's Child", their auxiliary power would only give them 2 seconds of phaser fire.RIKER: Weapons status?
WORF: Auxiliary power only. Two seconds phaser fire available.
New addition to blssdwlf's world: despite being equipped with four forward-facing pulse phasers and standard phaser arrays, the Defiant is ACTUALLY equipped with only a single phaser weapon that can fire its beam out of any place you want it to.Doesn't sound like the phaser generator was moved at all. The dialogue puts it as ONE phaser generator that powered all the emitters.
Okay then...
Which, again, eliminates any possible utility of putting 200 emitters on the outside of the hull in the first place. That's your 200-gun battleship with all of the guns fed by a single magazine with a single loader that can only service one of them at a time. Even if the phasers DID work that way, they would immediately be at a disadvantage the first time someone built a ship with TWO generators instead of one.The only hardware that appears to be outside the hull are the emitters and the power conduit to get the phaser power to a specific emitter(s). That doesn't imply more powerful since what makes the phaser more powerful is well, more power sent to it.
AFAIK, phasers don't directly draw their power from the warp engines except in very unique circumstances.Which has an interesting question... what phasers are more powerful when the two hulls are separated? The long phaser strip on the saucer section powered by impluse engines or the longest short phaser strip on the battle section powered by warp power?
What's slightly more interesting here is 1) Worf doesn't fire "full phasers" until Picard specifically gives him permission to do so, which mirrors "Q Who" and leads me to think that the phasers on the saucer section are normally limited to fire "standard charge" until the Captain orders "Mister Worf, set phasers on 'whupass'" in which case FULL PHASERS channel all power from the emitters.What is interesting here is that phaser plasma is being sent to a small group of presumably 40 emitters. Whether that means a whole strip or only part of a strip was used we won't know because we don't get an exterior view of the phaser firing. But it does show that all of the phaser power (and a little more) can fire through a single beam.
In "The Nth Degree" even a full charge is inadequate, so Geordi fires a full charge PLUS maxes out 40 of the emitters (probably just a bit beyond spec) to get a little more juice out of that one blast.
Significantly here, despite shunting EPS power through 40 different emitters, only a single beam is actually fired. Which means 40 phaser emitters all discharge into a single beam, and that's a canon example of amplification.
Thanks for noticing that!
That phasers use nadion particles is virtually canon at this point and I'm pretty sure the references to plasma actually refer to the EPS system that powers the phasers.Based on the above dialogue there is evidence that the TNG phasers are plasma-based (the "plasma phasers). That could explain where the spare parts for the NX-01's phase cannons came from
OTOH, I could see a nadion being a sort of modified proton or something (that's basically what an alpha particle is, right?) in which case the phaser beam would be a type of highly energized plasma as we understand the concept.