How much territory can a starship cover at maximum impulse, am I mistaken in thinking that starships fight at impulse speeds?
James
James
What kind of fuel does an impulse engine use and how long does it take a ship to use up it's impulse fuel?
James
What kind of fuel does an impulse engine use and how long does it take a ship to use up it's impulse fuel?
Try this...
http://www.ussdragonstar.com/utilitycore/warpspeeds.asp
Just the first hit on Google. There are a bunch more out there to play with.
Do you all remember "The Doomsday Machine"? If I remember correctly the Enterprise lost warp drive and had only impulse, Spock told Decker something about the Doomsday Machine being able to refuel while the Enterprise could not!
Ever since I saw a physicist on tv point out the inconsistency of it, I've had a major geeky peeve with how silly - but common - it is for spaceships in sci-fi flim and movies to have, for some reason, both artifical gravity and a reaction-based propulsion system! (e.e; rockets, thrusters, ion engines, etc...)
Try this...
http://www.ussdragonstar.com/utilitycore/warpspeeds.asp
Just the first hit on Google. There are a bunch more out there to play with.
I wouldn't go by that. I typed in Warp 9.975 (Voyagers top speed) and it says Voyager could traverse 100,000 lightyears in about 16 and a half years, getting to Federation space about 70,000 would take 14 years according to that, not 70. Somethings not quite right there.
Try this...
http://www.ussdragonstar.com/utilitycore/warpspeeds.asp
Just the first hit on Google. There are a bunch more out there to play with.
I wouldn't go by that. I typed in Warp 9.975 (Voyagers top speed) and it says Voyager could traverse 100,000 lightyears in about 16 and a half years, getting to Federation space about 70,000 would take 14 years according to that, not 70. Somethings not quite right there.
It's much safer to assume that impulse, unlike warp, is newtonian enough that a ship must ACCELERATE to or beyond the speed of light, and will remain at that speed for a good amount of time until drag from the interstellar medium slows it down. That probably explains why they were burning fuel as fast as they were: inside a solar system (where there isn't much free hydrogen) and jetting around at full impulse power trying to maintain high FTL speeds and maneuver at the same time. Picture a nuclear-powered submarine blowing a reactor hose and suddenly having to maintain flank speed against, say, a two-mile long giant crocodile just on battery power; they're gonna run out of juice VERY quickly.DM has some real problems. Presumably, the Cornucopia of doom goes faster than light, otherwise why the hurry? So Impulse must be FTL. Or something.
Try this...
http://www.ussdragonstar.com/utilitycore/warpspeeds.asp
Just the first hit on Google. There are a bunch more out there to play with.
I wouldn't go by that. I typed in Warp 9.975 (Voyagers top speed) and it says Voyager could traverse 100,000 lightyears in about 16 and a half years, getting to Federation space about 70,000 would take 14 years according to that, not 70. Somethings not quite right there.
Correct. There's the fact that Voyager never once in the entire series ever achieved its stated top speed, and the only time it came close, almost exploded. If you plug in a more reasonable value like, say, warp 8, you get your 70 year figure (since Voyager only had to travel 70,000 light years).
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.