Hmh? Wormholes, tachyon eddies, things abandoned by their makers long ago and gone wild... They're the staple of Trek storytelling.I recall no NATURAL phenomenon being cited as driving a vessel or object over interstellar distances.
Why? We witness no major power leap from warp 5 to warp 6, or from warp 2 to warp 3 - why should there be a difference between that and the leap from warp 0 to warp 1?In either case, said “power” would be such a minute fraction of that applicable to warp drive its addition TO warp’s in an emergency would make no appreciable difference…IF impulse “power” is sufficient ONLY to apply a velocity of less than lightspeed
Uh, what? I still can't understand what you are saying. Cochrane discovered warp - what on Earth does that have to do with impulse being FTL?But the reference is NOT in isolation, but consistent with many another impulse reference.
I'd argue the exact reverse: it's convoluted to try and wrangle a short rather than a long period between the 2-day ETA and the loss of the last crystal based on stardates.Yeah, I know we don’t know how long a Stardate’s decimals are…I know we don’t know how long elapsed between the two day citation and the log entry…but honestly Timo, if you’re not straining at gnats to refute this I’d like to know what you’d call it…
Not necessarily - Trek is full of impulse approaches to star systems. The most infamous of these is Riker dropping to impulse at Saturn when he's in an armageddon-level hurry to get to Earth in "BoBW II". Also, shuttles at impulse are often sent to deploy personnel to star systems in journeys that last for several dialogue-filled scenes (this being the dramatic purpose of the journey, of course) even though a warping starship would obviously get them there more quickly. This rather suggests the ships cannot warp or otherwise get in there faster than the impulse shuttles.Did Enterprise drop from warp on assume a twelve hour forty-three minute sublight approach? Ridiculous!
I'd like to chalk that up to Geordi's infamously warped sense of humor. After all, why does Riker order the speed to be increased? Because he's tired of listening to LaForge's bad jokes - that's the sole evident reason for the order! A flippant retort from LaForge would certainly fit the picture there. "Go faster!" "Yes, Sir, crawling as slow as I can."One might well wonder, how in HELL did these lines make it onto the air? Were Rick Sternbach and the Okudas’ technical advisements overridden? Was every actor in the scene brain dead that day of shooting? Or could it perhaps be that cast and crew alike decided to let air (on 9 May 1988) something they’d come to realize…even desire…that they knew well the fanboys would explode in anger over?
True enough. But Valtane's PADD confirms that the journey is only about to start in earnest.Per Sulu, “We’re heading home under full impulse.” Pretty explicit. Not “at full impulse, about to start for home.” UNDER full impulse.
More importantly, he does not utter "Aft!" at any point. He's not doing anything to evade the wave, either at warp or impulse, so that argument is right out in determining which is faster and by how much. He's merely turning into the wave, in a maneuver that apparently successfully mimics the nautical version.Note too what Sulu does NOT say: “Visual! My…God! FULL EMERGENCY WARP AFT!!!”
For all we know, yes. But nothing indicates that this trip would be particularly fast or would span a long distance in a short time. As already mentioned, TNG is full of examples of people being dropped off the E-D outside a solar system so that they can putter at impulse to a conference of some sort while the ship flies off at warp. "Mind's Eye" is probably one of those.Georgi is en route to Risa in a shuttlepod. A shuttlePOD. Nacelled, but warp drive-less.
When a ship is seen doing warp, in 99% of cases there is no mention of her being warp-capable. Why should "Encounter at Farpoint" or "Arsenal of Freedom" be any different? Nobody ever outright said the E-D was warp-capable, either - it's what you always take for granted in Star Trek.doesn’t the above, via Occam’s Razor, suggest…ahem…another explanation?
Okay, let's return the exact courtesy and call you a mole-molesting mormon. Now, what does that have to do with the nearly complete lack of evidence on FTL impulse?So please, do me the respect of offering something more than the flailing apologism of your previous post, ‘kay?
In this particular case, Valiant's record tapes explicitly refer to the ship being swept out of the galaxy by an ion storm.“Where No Man”
I recall no NATURAL phenomenon being cited as driving a vessel or object over interstellar distances.
Unless, of course, both warp drives and impulse engines produce some measure of ACCELERATION, not a pre-determined speed. TMP's "Warp point five" might actually be unit of velocity change per second, not a pre-determined velocity. Adding impulse power would simply add another warp factor on top of the ship's additional acceleration, although it does this without actually warping anything.“Corbomite Maneuver”
Whether “impulse power” refers to “power from some source, normally assigned to impulse propulsion” OR “the thrust/speed applying ‘power’ of the impulse drive” is irrelevant. In either case, said “power” would be such a minute fraction of that applicable to warp drive its addition TO warp’s in an emergency would make no appreciable difference…IF impulse “power” is sufficient ONLY to apply a velocity of less than lightspeed.
Except even when they cut in warp drives the First Federation marker buoy doesn't change its position by more than a few meters relative to the Enterprise. If it is trying to hit the Enterprise, it's doing a suspiciously thorough job of precisely matching its acceleration curve while still maintaining a closing speed of about one meter per second.Another one I forgot. How do they FIRST attempt flight from the radiation-emitting cube? Do they warp away? Nope; they engage aft impulse! Why? Wouldn’t warping off make more sense? It would…if ONLY warp could apply hyperlight motion…
The way I see it, the “rules” are as follows (in order of importance):
1) If it happens on the air, it’s real.
2)Off-air data – whatever its source – is to be trusted only inasmuch as it doesn’t conflict with series data.
3)Data presented in series subsequent to TOS are – if in conflict with that of TOS – in error, as regards TOS.
4)Visual data may be ignored where obviously in error
I yet await your citation of a natural phenomenon in Trek by which a vessel was moved (NOT displaced) over an interstellar distance.
And incidentally, Valiant would hardly warrant the name “Galactic Survey Cruiser” were she incapable of surveying the galaxy. Clearly she was hyperlight.
Why couldn’t/didn’t she warp away?
Warp delivers bigger “oomphs” by far than impulse.
...he did not invent a drive. Assuming an underlying “series reality,” what might this mean? That the principle he discovered was applicable to another sort of drive (e.g., impulse).
Lexington would have been (possibly) reduced to the use, in combat, of but a single ftl propulsor, with nothing left to “fall back on.”
They’re at 12:43 at warp five…they fight…they lose warp…
And by the way, Riker’s dropping out of warp by Saturn makes PERFECT sense if he could then cross the intervening light hours ftl on impulse…and NO sense if he couldn’t, so there!
What does Valtane’s PADD have to do with anything? I’m serious. Is there something written on it? Is her handing it to Sulu of some significance? I don’t get you.
EVERY shuttle “away flight” involves the ship’s having gone somewhere else, or someone taking a shuttle TO somewhere else.
Saucers don’t have nacelles, ergo they lack warp drive.
But the E-D’s saucer was able (“Arsenal of Freedom”) to go ftl-ing off somewhere from a dead stop. On impulse.
As to warp factors not denoting velocity, “That Which Survives” (among other episodes) puts the paid to that, I think:
RAHDA: We're holding warp eight point four, sir. If we can maintain it, our estimated time of arrival is eleven and one half solar hours.
SPOCK: Eleven point three three seven hours, Lieutenant. I wish you would be more precise.
In "That Which Survives", "Obsession", "Breads and Circuses", the Enterprise was traveling approx 1,000 ly/day going between star systems.
No it isn't, because light does not accelerate. An impulse engine that can push your ship at 20Gs will get you to the speed of light in about 2 weeks. If we're assuming Einstein doesn't apply (and we must, because this is space opera so it pretty much doesn't) then you could accelerate to just about ANY speed using an impulse engine, assuming you had enough time to build up an acceleration.Whether impulse (or warp) applies a measure of speed or a measure of acceleration is irrelevant.
Not if impulse power is equivalent in terms of velocity change to warp one or two.The ratio of zero-to-[nearly]-warp-one to warp one-to-“escape warp” (i.e., whatever measure of warp acceleration OR velocity Enterprise was applying/trying to reach in “Corbomite”) is so vast that to add impulse (i.e., something less than one cee’s worth of either) would be insignificant.
Possibly. But then, that could also be 216 gees, of which an extra ten or twenty from the impulse engines wouldn't be missed.I mean, warp six (presumably the minimum they’d be trying to employ) is at LEAST 6-cubed-cee, or 216 “units” (of light-multiples, OR acceleration), right?
On the other hand, if you assume the Enterprise is ACCELERATING at some factor--a brachistochrone trajectory that requires running up to a maximum velocity and then braking on the second half of the trip--then Rahda's reading off a computer display that's calculating their ETA while Spock is doing second-derivative calculus in his head. That's not simple precision in arithmetic, that's Spock giving Rahda an F for the day. The only thing you could determine is their AVERAGE speed, but the Enterprise would reach a peak velocity many times that speed at "turnaround." This would nicely explain why warp speed is never shown consistently throughout the series; the only thing we can guesstimate is AVERAGE velocity, for a particular journey while actual flight profiles are buried in the subtext.As to warp factors not denoting velocity, “That Which Survives” (among other episodes) puts the paid to that, I think:
RAHDA: We're holding warp eight point four, sir. If we can maintain it, our estimated time of arrival is eleven and one half solar hours.
SPOCK: Eleven point three three seven hours, Lieutenant. I wish you would be more precise.
which incidentally gives a far greater than 8.4-cubed-cee value for warp 8.4, given the distance involved began as 990.7 light years…but I digress.
Also objectionable to me personally are the post-TOS efforts to drag TOS-near-future-history kicking and screaming into our timeline.
"faster than light, no left or right" -- "Voyager"
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