If you are not going to modernised Star Trek believably what is the point? As for tactical data, every shuttle should a have been receiving live tactical updates of the man sensors adn ship systems. It's not far-fetched. It would be incompent design not to given the kind of tech they should have available and it would be vital info to preserve at all costs.
That would be inconsistent with believability. NASA, for example, uses simulations based on new data to train for unexpected situations; their astronauts spend six to ten MONTHS running those simulations in order to figure out what works and what doesn't. Same with the Air Force and the Navy, who on encounters with a new weapon or some new data on that weapon, spend months or years running drills and simulations to teach their pilots how to cope with it.
Even Starfleet uses traditional simulators to train its cadets, in a variety of scenarios and in a variety of ways. So what exactly gives you the impression that a group of raw cadets is even CAPABLE of programming a realistic simulation -- let alone running it enough times to matter -- in the handful of hours between the destruction of Vulcan and the fight over Earth?
There's only one time in all of Trek history that anyone ever tried to run a simulation purely on a computer, and that was Booby Trap. This is explicitly a special case because Geordi was proposing turning the entire ship over to computer control and wanted to see if the computer would be able to do it based on the variables involved. In the end, he was forced to conclude that it could NOT, and Picard wound up flying the ship out of the asteroid belt by hand.
Note that this was something only Picard could have done with his greater insight and experience. No amount of simulation practice would have mattered. It's something to consider that for a crew with literally ZERO combat experience, it's fairly unlikely they had a proper estimate of Narada's tactical capabilities.
They did seem to know the ships had emerged from warp however. If you are arguing that that happened to quickly to adjust his course, that also proves my other point about approaching more slowly.
Again: what reason did he have to take further precautions than he did? Dropping out of warp with shields up was more than sufficient to survive the collision with the first ship and the glancing blow from the second.
Warp signatures are easy to track, but individual vessels in space are not, unless you know exactly where they are ahead of time.
Its not as though they didn’t know where to look.
They
didn't. Space is
big. Ships are small. Even a ship as large as the Narada would barely register relative to Vulcan's much greater mass and emission signature, even without that incredibly noisy drill filling the airwaves with interference. They knew the fleet had dropped out of warp only because they'd been tracking it the whole time; they had no idea the condition of any other vessels in orbit of the planet or the surrounding solar system.
How far a way were the Vulcans at the time do we know. I thought they might be on the edge of the system at least.
Riker said they were "passing through" the system, evidently a survey mission of some kind. Since they were probably surveying the PLANETS of the solar system, then they were at least inside the orbit of Neptune, although they could have been as close as Mars or the Asteroid Belt.
More importantly, they managed to enter Earth orbit without taking notice of the Enterprise-E and were not particularly alarmed by that ship's sudden leap into a space time portal. So again, ships are hard to spot at sublight speed unless they're very close to you or unless you know ahead of time where to look for them.
What would Pike have done differently after coming out of warp at Vulcan if he had known it wasn’t a warship?
1) He would have called Nero a criminal and told him to surrender and submit to arrest.
2) He would have fired directly on the drill, figuring that the Narada probably couldn't extend its shields to protect it and whatever it was probably wasn't really military in nature.
3) As an alternate to #2, he probably would rigged his shuttle with a high-powered explosive device (tricobalt devices or something) figuring that Nero's sensors wouldn't be able to tell faked lifesigns from real ones.
To be sure, if he had known anything definite about the Narada other than "it is powerful" he could have explored other options. He did not, however, and his "on the fly" thinking produced the longshot of a space jump of a small team to disable the "high energy pulse device" whose nature and capabilities were still unknown.
Scotty scanned the Narada but still couldn’t tell it wasn’t a warship?
No, he couldn't. Apparently he didn't know enough Romulan to read the words "Romulan mining vessel" prominently printed on the hull.
Here's an example.
Look at this picture. This vessel has no guns, no long-range missiles, no torpedoes. It is armed only with some basic air defense systems and some ECM gear. The only thing that stands out about this vessel is that it has a large flat deck and an open space below decks which, between the two of them, carry a suspiciously large number of military aircraft.
So prove to me that this is NOT a warship.
If you look at the video again you well see that there was. He only had to ask someone else to do that. "Arm phasers", there done. Should have been done earlier anyway. If you can’t ask for phasers and have them available within a few seconds you need better systems because no one will give you that kind of break.
This is Star Trek, dude. They ALWAYS get that kind of break.
Historical question: how long did Kirk continue to play chicken with the First Federation marker buoy before arming phasers? For that matter: how long did Kirk wait to arm phasers against the Fesarius? You'll find that in NEITHER case did Kirk order the phasers armed until he was 100% sure he was going to have to use them.
I could go down a long list for you, but Trek has enormous precedence that "Arm Phasers" is not -- repeat, NOT -- an appropriate response for any random scary situation. You warp into a debris field?
Shields up. Weird space ship appears in front of you?
Evasive action. Chased across the universe by godlike entities?
Hail them.
You arm phasers when someone is shooting at you,
not a moment sooner. Even Robau didn't arm his weapons the moment he saw the Narada, he waited until AFTER Narada had started firing on him. Interestingly, Kelvin probably would have fared better if Robau had focussed all of his shields directly forward and given himself more time to respond, rather than make his phasers snap to attention and screen those torpedoes at point blank range.
It's not a one or the other situation. Pike made no attempt to use phasers dispite knowing from the start the Narada had missiles and presumably knowing fire control was better than in the Kelvin's day.
Not with the amount of warning he had (virtually none, from spotting the Narada to their first shot). That he doubled up on his shields is probably the only reason Enterprise was able to remain (at least partly) in the fight.
You have just finished claiming they can’t see starships at that range
UNLESS they know exactly where to look, which they did.
There’s a lot of wiggle room between those extremes, but the film gives the impression he had already come close to doing just that against the Klingons, which is part of my argument.
The film doesn't give the impression that he took out the Klingon homeworld in a stand up fight. Only that he bombed a Klingon prison planet for some unknown reason and destroyed a whole lot of ships. How, why or exactly when are never made clear.
We know from background, of course, that the "attack on the prison planet" is just a last-minute dialog change from Nero's escape from Rurapenthe, and the film isn't WRITTEN to give any sort of impression from that encounter other than "Nero's back." The number "47" is a number pulled out of a hat by writers as an overt "47" reference and isn't meaningful beyond that; otherwise, it's perfectly explicable as the shooting of a chunk of red matter into an unsuspecting Klingon shipyard.
But when he does something that doesn’t quite fit, you come up with the ad hoc excuse that he doesn’t think that far ahead (?).
I'm unable to locate the part of my post where I suggested Nero was a pre-planning mastermind. In fact I'm pretty sure I described him as a half-crazed terrorist.
But I'm with Timo on this one. Nero spent 25 years planning the attack on Vulcan and his ultimate revenge with Spock; from his point of view, the Story of Nero ends with Vulcan spiraling the toilet bowl. Everything after that is a sort of "icing on the cake" plan that even his crew might not have been prepared for. There is, in fact, a scene in the script where Ayel challenges Nero for control of the ship, telling him that the attack on Earth is pointless and they've already done what they set out to do and it's time to go home to Romulus; Nero responds by stabbing him in the face.
A blackout from all likely sources just after a call for assistance (which in itself much have been a big deal or the Vulcans would have managed it themselves)? I don’t think so.
So you're the commander of an aircraft carrier. You're sent to relieve New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. You're three minutes away from launching your rescue helicopter to start airlifting relief supplies. Suddenly a highly disoriented midshipman who hasn't completed basic training and isn't even supposed to be on board stumbles onto the bridge and starts screaming "New Orleans isn't experiencing a natural disaster! It's being attacked by Soviets! I saw it on the internet last night! Somebody set off a nuke at a Chinese shipyard and it was reported the missile was fired by a HUGE Russian battlecruiser! There's Communists waiting for us at New Orleans, I promise you that!"
First officer says, "You know, he might not be wrong. Also, we're not getting any radio traffic from New Orleans."
This, to you, is reason enough to put the ship at battlestations and arm your fighters for an airstrike?
But since SF expected to find a possible evacuation in effect (not to mention normal traffic), coming out of warp in low Vulcan orbit would never be appropriate.
Are you that much more familiar with Starfleet evacuation protocols than I am? Just wondering.
Certainly. Kirk had just finished telling Pike he believed the ship was the same one that attacked the Kelvin
And Pike didn't believe him. Did you forget that part?
Thinking about what's on the other side of those wrecks is part of getting his ship out of danger.
And is a secondary concern to AVOIDING those wrecks in the first place.
Pretend, just for a second, that aren't talking about a movie. Pretend it's real life, and you're driving down the street when you get a phone call from a high school student who warns you that Iraqis are attacking your city. You don't believe him... until three minutes later, when suddenly the car in front of you explodes. You swerve to avoid the wreck, then two more. On avoiding the third wreck, your car runs head-on into an Iraqi T-72 tank which proceeds to riddle your car with bullets.
The specific reason you didn't anticipate the tank is... what?
No-one is going to put an inexperienced helmsman on the bridge of a flag under those cercumstances.
It's a
rescue mission. It's about the only set of circumstances where they WOULD put a rookie at the helm.
Unless it's TNG, of course, where they stick Wesley in the driver seat to take on the fucking
Borg.
Pike’s job as Captain is to tell Sulu what he wants in generally terms and let him get on with doing it. If he has to pilot the ship too...
You don't know what a "helmsman" actually does, do you?