How do transphasic torpedos work?
Very well, apparently.
Very well, apparently.
18 MTs actually closer to a thousand times the yield of the bomb that hit Hiroshima (13-18 KT). Which I think just demonstrates your point that much more.I think people toss around technobabble numbers so much that they forget what the numbers actually mean. Kirk's Enterprise, in the original series, had torpedoes which had about 18MT yield each. That's the same as the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima for every single frackin' torpedo. (Phasers are roughly 2MT yield).
Hey, guys,
Thread going on over in Trek Lit about transphasiac torpedos. How do they work? And are they only effective against the Borg?
As seen in Voyager's "Endgame", one t-torp took out a Borg cube. That being the case, certainly only one would take out a Romulan Warbird, a Negh'var, a Sovereign, pretty much anything. The discussion in Trek Lit sparked discussion about a new arms race in the quadrant, but for some reason I'm thinking the t-torp phases through the Borg multi-adaptive shielding and targets the cube's transwarp coils, causing a massive chain reaction of all of the cube's t-warp coils, and destroying the cube.
Hence, though devastating against cubes and spheres, it wouldn't be much more than a photon torpedo's-worth of explosives (maybe even less, if the phasing mechanism takes up much of the torpedo's interior space) against non-transwarp-equipped ships.
Is there discussion, whether in a previous thread or a novel, in which this is shown? I am led to understand it is discussed in "Greater Than The Sum", and while I have the book, I am leaving it alone for the time being while I finish some other ones in chronological order.
Thanks in advance
18 MTs actually closer to a thousand times the yield of the bomb that hit Hiroshima (13-18 KT). Which I think just demonstrates your point that much more.![]()
Precisely. These things are designed by trained engineers and experts, not Jeremy Clarkson. More power isn't a trait indicitive of "more advanced" weaponry.
In that case, Kirk's torpedoes are already frackin' rediculous...
Depends on whom you ask. TOS itself doesn't give any yields, or other points of comparison. We hear that a small spherical container (torpedo warhead?) is readily available for housing "less than an ounce" of antimatter (whatever the unit "ounce" may mean in the 23rd century - the way the effects are described, a 23rd century ounce equals a few kilograms!), but that's pretty much it.
ENT doesn't go into yields, either, except in the ambiguous terms of iso-units. It's only from the TNG Tech Manual onwards that we start to get yield figures, and that book specifically mentions that some contents are deliberately misleading to fool enemy agents reading the tome...
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