My last DS9 viewing featured Kasidy Yates' ship, which doesn't have obvious nacelles.ST starships don't actually NEED nacelles. Galaxy class saucers were warp capable without them.
Nor do the Borg craft.
My last DS9 viewing featured Kasidy Yates' ship, which doesn't have obvious nacelles.ST starships don't actually NEED nacelles. Galaxy class saucers were warp capable without them.
What are your thoughts on one nacelled ships? are they throwaway designs? is there a hidden genius to them? Practical/Unpractical in universe?
The Baxial, Neelix's shuttle, lacked double nacelles and very obviously had warp drive.All the shuttlecraft that are warp capable have two nacelles, not one.
In GEN, Soren's torpedo sized weapon had the ability to reach the Veridian star in eleven seconds after being fired from a planet's surface.or single-use designs (photon torpedoes being in effect a field capture and sustainer engine with a set of field coils)
Strictly speaking, the nacelle is just a container for a specific type of engine that Starfleet tends to use. Vulcan ships use propeller rings and Tellarite ships use God only knows. As an analogy to modern aviation: there are many different types of jets (rockets, pulse jets, ramjets, turbofans, turbojet, scramjets) and weird hybrid engines like turboprops. Something about Starfleet's engine designs (or their starship designs, more likely) necessitates their engine components being placed in self-contained nacelles external to the actual hull. Given that Starfleet ships aren't universally much faster than some of their rivals (even the nacelle-less bird of prey managed to reach Warp 9) it probably has to do with the specific TYPE of warp drive they are actually using.My last DS9 viewing featured Kasidy Yates' ship, which doesn't have obvious nacelles.
Nor do the Borg craft.
The Baxial, Neelix's shuttle, lacked double nacelles and very obviously had warp drive.In GEN, Soren's torpedo sized weapon had the ability to reach the Veridian star in eleven seconds after being fired from a planet's surface.
The Enterprise's torpedoes had the capacity of being launched from a orbiting Enterprise and intercepting that weapon, a weapon moving at warp speed.
Starfleet torpedoes don't have "field capture and sustainer engines," they have full up warp drives.
It's interesting you point that out- do you remember which episode that happened to occur?
It IS a convoluted mess. Has been for years.
Sure, but they wouldn't have been a few light days away from Delta-Vega when they crossed the barrier.
And to allude to the earlier discussion, if you're assuming that there is some sort of subspace fuckery going on with impulse drive anyway (which there almost certainly is) then there's no reason to assume the ship would be limited to subluminal velocity under impulse power.
..and again, you're making assumptions that the impulse drive can get you past the light speed barrier -and- that warp speed is tied to acceleration, which was never shown, in any episode.Now here's where it dovetails back to the original discussion: if a warp factor is a unit of acceleration rather than absolute velocity (and it pretty much has to be) then the travel time to Delta Vega finally makes sense. Enterprise CAN travel interstellar distances under impulse power, and exceeding light speed is trivially easy.
The answer is: it's not about velocity, the Enterprise sometimes reaches many tens of thousands of times the speed of light, but it has to SLOW DOWN for the second half of its trip in order to not completely overshoot its destination, and that long slowdown stage accounts for part of the travel time.
Time dilation has never been a factor in Star Trek and probably never will be.
The movie Generations. Soren's missile was going to reach the star in a few seconds (so it was either a warp-speed missile or a very, very small star), and Worf said that while the Enterprise was theoretically capable of shooting it down, the fact that they didn't know where on the planet it was coming from meant they might not be able to lock on to it before it reached its target.
No. The explanation that fits the relevant facts without relying on unnecessary guesses is usually the correct one. Omitting relevant information to preserve simplicity results in an incorrect explanation.Yes, and you are making it more so..The simplest explanation is usually the correct one
In which case, Kirk's initial log entry noting the seeming impossibility of finding another Earth Ship that close to the barrier would be rather silly. After all, if Delta Vega was that close to the barrier, then whoever BUILT that outpost, years ago, would already be aware of the barrier and, possibly, of the Valiant's distress beacon as well. This episode implies -- and heavily depends on -- the idea that the Enterprise is traveling to a region of space where no one has ever been, only to be incredibly surprised to find someone HAS been there before and that something terrible happened to them. Everything that happens AFTER they cross the barrier, therefore, happens relatively far from it, closer to known/charted space.Besides in this rather large spiral galaxy we call home, would you not consider it likely, if not probable that some stars and their retinue of planets and objects may end up crossing the Energy Barrier because of their natural orbits or because they have reached the galaxy's escape velocity? Delta Vega could be an outlier, extremely close to the Barrier, but just inside
We have multiple instances of starships doing exactly this throughout Trek history, so it's evidently possible. Significantly, nothing implies that it ISN'T possible, so we can safely conclude that the ship can, in fact, attain superluminal velocity without warp drive. A really great example of this is "Relics" where the Enterprise, under 60% impulse power, covers a distance of about 90 million kilometers in 2 to 3 minutes, implying an average velocity about twice the speed of light (at below C, that would have taken almost 9 minutes)...and there's no reason to believe that the ship would be able to attain superluminal velocity without the warp drive.
... to all explanations that fit the facts equally.You make an assumption that is unnecessary to start with, unsupported by evidence provided, and just keep hammering away at a point which can easily be explained without all the machinations. Occam's razor applies....
I can give you two:Can you show me ONE, one single solitary example of that EVER happening on ANY of the Star Trek television series, please. Just one.
Perhaps not, but it fits the facts well enough. It's just a feature of spaceflight that has never been explicitly described on screen in Star Trek. Which is fine, because in all honesty, it's never been explicitly described in ANY science fiction production, even those productions where this is undeniably the case.the warp drive is NOT going to be something that will ever perfectly do that.
It's not a problem, it's just a fact.And here's where you have a problem?
This "implies" a reduced FTL velocity, and not a restriction to non FTL speeds.Earth bases which were only days away are now years in the distance.
This "implies" a reduced FTL velocity, and not a restriction to non FTL speeds.
That we can agree on.The Enterprise possessed the ability using impulse engines to reach far distant Earth bases in years.
Not centuries.
The answer is: it's not about velocity, the Enterprise sometimes reaches many tens of thousands of times the speed of light, but it has to SLOW DOWN for the second half of its trip in order to not completely overshoot its destination, and that long slowdown stage accounts for part of the travel time.
...
I can give you two:
UHURA: Captain, Starfleet signals growing in strength, sir. ...They still have the intruder on their monitors. It's decelerating!
SULU: Confirmed. Lunar beacons indicate intruder on a course into Earth orbit.
Also:
PICARD: From this point, no station aboard, repeat no station, for any reason will make use of transmitted signals or intercom. We'll try and take them by surprise. Let's see what this galaxy class starship can do. (to Worf) Lieutenant, inform engine room to prepare for maximum acceleration.
is the .25c impulse maximum speed a fanfic creation or implied in dialogue?
That assumes V'Ger was flying a brachistochrone trajectory all the way from the machine planet and making a beeline directly for Earth. We've always kind of assumed that, but it doesn't follow from observations; V'ger has knowledge that "spans this universe" which means it has been sort of aimlessly wandering the galaxy for the last couple of centuries, gathering data, eating solar systems, doing its own thing, until it suddenly had an existential crisis and decided to find its creator.I bolded part of your statement to show that it is unlikely to be true in your first example. For your example to be true where a ship has "to slow down for the second half of its trip" then V'Ger should have been decelerating well before encountering the Enterprise. Instead it is decelerating near destination.
"Now hear this: Maximum, you're entitled to know, means we'll be pushing our engines well beyond safety limits." And minutes later, Worf says:The phrase "maximum acceleration" sounds more like instructions to reach maximum warp speed in the shortest amount of time. There isn't anything in the dialogue to suggest that warp itself is a unit of acceleration.
Nor do we know for sure that V'ger was still traveling at FTL velocity when the Enterprise encountered it. We know for sure that V'ger was two days away from Earth when it encountered Epsilon IX, but we have no idea what velocity it was traveling. For a cloud 82 AUs in diameter, V'ger could be traveling anywhere between 10 and 50 C and it would still take several minutes for that cloud to fully pass over the station, time during which V'ger destroyed it with a zappytorpedo. If it was still at that velocity when Enterprise intercepted it, we have no way of knowing.
That assumes V'Ger was flying a brachistochrone trajectory all the way from the machine planet and making a beeline directly for Earth. We've always kind of assumed that, but it doesn't follow from observations; V'ger has knowledge that "spans this universe" which means it has been sort of aimlessly wandering the galaxy for the last couple of centuries, gathering data, eating solar systems, doing its own thing, until it suddenly had an existential crisis and decided to find its creator.
"Now hear this: Maximum, you're entitled to know, means we'll be pushing our engines well beyond safety limits." And minutes later, Worf says:
WORF: We're now at warp nine point three, sir, which takes us past the red line, sir.
Of course, it's a scifi tradition to conflate "velocity" and "acceleration" in dialog. Even the Expanse does this, despite the fact that ships in that series EXPLICITLY do not work that way.
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