The attack of the Klingon battle cruiser in "Elaan of Troyius" would make more sense as well, if a given warp speed were "lower" inside of a solar system.Also, "Paradise Syndrome" would immensely benefit if warp inside (some) star systems were drastically slower than outside them. Thus, Spock's multi-hour dash at warp nine could indeed equate the mere two months of sublight travel back in the wake of the big rock. And the warp 8+ slighshot maneuvers of "Tomorrow is Yesterday" and ST4:TVH would also make better sense, not requiring split-second timing but rather minute-level accuracy...
the impression I received was that after the Enterprise entered the system where the Constellation was found, she didn't re-enter warp for the rest of the episode. It was all impulse maneuvering."Doomsday Machine" could qualify since the battle takes place around the 3rd planet orbit.
The passage of the Enterprise through the comets tail, the duration of the passage, would indicate that at least during that point the ship was sublight, fairly slow sublight at that."The Balance of Terror" I think alternated between "shallow" and "deep" water FTL since they do fight around a comet with a tail.
Not directly during TOS, although there were indirect references. TNG was more clear with the connection.Slight tangent - does anyone know when was "subspace" directly associated to "warp drive"?
the impression I received was that after the Enterprise entered the system where the Constellation was found, she didn't re-enter warp for the rest of the episode. It was all impulse maneuvering."Doomsday Machine" could qualify since the battle takes place around the 3rd planet orbit.
The passage of the Enterprise through the comets tail, the duration of the passage, would indicate that at least during that point the ship was sublight, fairly slow sublight at that."The Balance of Terror" I think alternated between "shallow" and "deep" water FTL since they do fight around a comet with a tail.
One possibility is that the Romulan ship had to periodically slow to sub-warp speed to rebuild energy reserves or let something "cool off." the Enterprise was conforming to the Romulans movements. Basically the Romulan was making a series of warp dashes. The Romuan commander timed one of these cool off pauses to bring the Enterprise into interaction with the comet, this might have been a old trick on the part of the commander.
Not directly during TOS, although there were indirect references. TNG was more clear with the connection.Slight tangent - does anyone know when was "subspace" directly associated to "warp drive"?
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