Given that it effectively kills you and makes a replica elsewhere... I'd say 100.0000%
Dis you know that Stephen King had his own version of the transporter? It was called the Jaunt. I think the short story in question is in Skeleton Crew, but not dead certain; he has a lot of story collections.
Given that it effectively kills you and makes a replica elsewhere... I'd say 100.0000%
Darn. I was trying to loose weight.I mean that's why they have the beams. To keep a person's molecules from dissipating and floating out into the universe.
Who?The information is being studied by top men.
Actually, in "Day of the Dove" what Spock describes as risky is actually what Kirk has defined as any use of the transporter to beam from one section of a ship to another [http://www.chakoteya.net/StarTrek/66.htm]:Actually, site-to-site has never been called risky in any episode or movie, in any era. Even Archer was doing it without comment, back in his day.
What elicits a single comment of worry in a single instance is intraship beaming, in TOS "Day of the Dove". But
a) it starts on a pad,
b) it takes place while the ship is careening out of control at high warp, and
c) the people involved are being made crazy by an alien entity anyway, and speaking nonsense of various sorts.
I don't think we ever hear of a site-to-site that would have gone wrong, either. It's pad-to-pad that fails miserably in ST:TMP...
Timo Saloniemi
Actually, site-to-site has never been called risky in any episode or movie, in any era. Even Archer was doing it without comment, back in his day.
Timo Saloniemi
We’ll look into that...Who?
Top... men.
Kor
We’ll look into that...
Actually, in "Day of the Dove" what Spock describes as risky is actually what Kirk has defined as any use of the transporter to beam from one section of a ship to another
Also, there's no mention of (b) as relevant.
Option (c) is you own interpretation of events that lacks direct support, as there is no indication that the pinwheel entity has altered the normal operation of the transporter. We can always appeal to the idea that things might be other than we have direct evidence to conclude that they are, but making that appeal ad infinitum can never get us anywhere.
Rather, the applicability of what Spock says about the danger involved hinges on whether transport without the use of a transporter pad is possible at all in TOS.
The clincher is that, on the other hand, if site-to-site transport isn't even possible with TOS tech, then the idea that it's safe to do with TOS tech is utter nonsense.
Either way, "Day of the Dove" establishes as canonically as anything can be established that site-to-site transport within a ship cannot be safely accomplished in TOS.
* - Recall that in "The Cloud Minders," when the High Advisor is beamed from Stratos to the zenite mine, Scotty first beams him onto the transporter pad.
For $1500, Shatner better wash my car too.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.