Absolutely.I still think Rand deserved a commendation for thinking of that.

Absolutely.I still think Rand deserved a commendation for thinking of that.
Did they mention phaser power packs prior to that episode?He also converted phaser energy into an engine propulsion source in TOS S1 - "The Galileo 7" (And talk about a plot complication...you're telling me he couldn't just rig something to plug the phaser power packs into/onto for the system to draw the energy that way? No...he had to lay there and somehow fire the Phaser INTO the engine core.)
If she were on Voyager, she would have gotten it.I still think Rand deserved a commendation for thinking of that.
I'm still trying to figure out how Spock ignited it. It's energy; how does it burn?
Where do they fit a Warp Drive on tiny baby shuttle Galileo?Logically thinking a shuttlecraft should not have warp capabilities! It's like a small vehicle used for ferrying a group of people down to a planet especially if the transporters aren't working properly or are inhibited in some way due to outside phenomenon, rather than an elongated car or motor home exploring the galaxy!
JB
I wouldn't sweat the placement of a warp power source on a Class F, really. It may go underfloor or inside the aft machinery wall of the aft compartment, or it may reside in the nacelles. But dilithium is never mentioned in connection with shuttles, and Class F is said to operate on "ion power" in TOS "The Menagerie" anyway, perhaps never annihilating any antimatter at all.
I'm still trying to figure out how Spock ignited it. It's energy; how does it burn?
Where do they fit a Warp Drive on tiny baby shuttle Galileo?
Most dialogue in TOS strongly indicates that the nacelles (AKA the pods) are the source of power for the ship's propulsion. The term "warp core" is never mentioned but the mixing of matter and antimatter is assumed to take place inside the nacelles, much like an aeroplane.Where do they fit a Warp Drive on tiny baby shuttle Galileo?
I mean we've seen sort of the innards in "Galileo 7" and there's not much room there. You know in TOS and TNG and VOY the Warp drive is seen taking up this huge area and having cold restarts and drama this drama that, something that could transport you back in time and not something you think could be tucked in the back of a tiny (already TARDIS like) shuttle. And do all warp drives need dilithium?
Dilithium crystals do seem to be a part of the M/AM reaction in TOS but not the dinky crystals or paddles which occasionally show up in the live action episodes - those tend to be used more for ship's system power generation plot points. Instead in TAS' The Terratin Incident we get indications that there are also some bigger, specialised crystals in the nacelles who's sole job it is to be involved with the M/AM reaction:If there's a dilithium crystal in the shuttle couldn't they use that one when the ones in the Enterprise fail.
Almost. There's still separate fuel supplies for each nacelle, as least on the Runabout which Picard used in Timescape:Seems like by the TMP/TNG era they are just for the generating of the warp field.
Warp coils are in each nacelle. Warp reactor generates the matter/antimatter energy. The energy combines in the dilithium crystal and creates a plasma stream. That stream is directed into the nacelles where it energizes the warp coils. The energized coils create the warp field
Helping hand:I found screenshots at Trekcore to confirm:
Oops! I didn't mean to break a rule, so I removed the hotlink.
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