Imagine if the admiral was Andorian, one of the captains was Tellarite, another was Vulcan, another was Betazoid, another was Bolian and then at least one human. Would that be an entertaining situation?
That situation would not arise at all. For starters, the task force would have a flag officer or fleet commander who would have authority over the entire fleet. Also, it seems unlikely the commanding officers of all the ships would be O6-level Captains, there would very likely be ships commanded by Commanders or even Lieutenant Commanders, as we see with the Full Circle fleet. Finally, even among officers of the same rank, command authority typically falls to whoever has seniority in that rank. Or if it comes down to it, there is apparently a Starfleet protocol allowing the CO of the "tactically superior" ship to take authority.
I agree, at minimum if you are going to go with the single 'base' ship, it should large enough to carry several medium-range warp capable auxiliary vessels (from the 2370s on this would be the Runabout or Flyer) as the Galaxy class aparrantly was but didn't.
Most estimates suggest this isn't enough to even travel between two star systems and the TNG:TM worsens this by suggesting a max speed of Warp 1.2 for the Type-6 shuttle which would be enough for intra-system travel but interstellar travel would be impossible (Earth to Alpha Centauri for instance would take over 2.5 years at that speed).
People always ignore the note at the bottom of the printed warp scales saying that the actual warp velocities are variable depending on local space conditions and the printed figures should just be used for comparison purposes rather than seen as absolutes. If anything, the printed warp scales have always been far, far too slow compared to what we actually see onscreen. (Like the alleged "speed = warp factor cubed" formula from TOS -- the onscreen velocity indicated in "That Which Survives" was about a thousand times faster than that.)
True, but the "recorded values" wouldn't be provided if they weren't accurate some of the time.
No matter how official the behind-the-scenes materials were, they still weren't canonical. The stuff onscreen could always ignore them and go with whatever suited the story better. And faster warp factors almost always suited the story. I can't think of a single instance where the supposedly "official" warp conversions were ever actually used in an episode or film.
I thought the Warp Factors were all just based around speed of plot.![]()
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