So how did Reliant not detect that Sulu had locked phasers?
In addition to the above, in theory, there might be passive and active locks, only the latter of which can be detected - and the fact that Sulu's beam wanders all across the hull of the
Reliant before hitting that important-looking blue dome might be sign of the former being used, with inferior results.
Wrong yet again, Timo. From "A Taste of Armageddon"
...Which is one of the many cases that prove that mere "Yellow alert" or "Red alert" tells the crew nothing about whether to raise shields or not. Rather, a top officer has to provide additional information, just as in that episode.
Because I don't know what it would be. But that's neither here nor there, because clearly the downside exists regardless of what I know or don't know. Otherwise, shields
would be regularly raised as a precaution, and indeed held up as a rule unless there was a good reason to drop them.
It's possible to speculate till the cows fly home, of course. Possibly shields seriously hinder sensors. Possibly holding up the shields allows the enemy to analyze them. Possibly holding up shields is really hard work, and every second spent holding them up before battle is away from holding them up in battle. Hard to tell. But the fact remains that Kirk generally avoids raising shields, and his ST2 behavior is simply consistent with his earlier and later behavior. Or that of Pike in the new movie, say.
That, and consistency with the rest of Star Trek. Which of course derives from the fact that going in without shields is good for drama as a thing, because it then allows for the raising of the shields to indicate further heightening of tensions. And it avoids the pitfall of keeping shields up all the time, because if that were indicated to be possible, then our heroes would always be invulnerable, which would be disastrous for drama.
An analagous situation would be a US navy ship in the Straits of Hormuz during the 80s tanker escorting operation first receiving a distress call from a tanker, then encountering an unknown ship near a secure zone that refuses to make appropriate signal contact and continued to approach.
...An "unknown" US Navy ship, that is. Readily found in the list of US Navy ships resting on the skipper's table. And flying an "unknown" US flag at that.
Yeah, it's definitely possible that Iranians had captured a
Spruance when the skipper wasn't looking. But not very likely.
Modern naval practices really aren't good analogies for all this Horatio Hornblower stuff that is going on in Trek... In the environment of the 19th century, a fighting frigate might indeed fall in pirate hands with our hero skipper being none the wiser. And apparently it again becomes possible in the 23rd century. But the audience would understand that it isn't an everyday occurrence in the future, because it's so absurdly unlikely in the present - so the writers would be going up a steep and high hill in trying to make it look as if our heroes were prepared for such an occurrence.
That's a nice scifi flick, yes. Nothing to do with WWII technology or tactics, though!
The threats encountered by the heroes in that movie are far less probable than those faced by Kirk in ST2. Submarines in WWII could not have sunk other submarines with torpedoes. German fighters could not have attacked surfaced submarines in the Atlantic. German destroyers could not have operated in the Atlantic. And so forth. None of this matters if the movie is treated as its own fictional universe, though, unrelated to WWII. Similarly, ST2 can be treated as existing in vacuum, in which case independent, "real-world" reasoning can be used to condemn or clear Kirk. But in the Trek context, different rules apply...
Timo Saloniemi