Third season. GR was out fishing. Or maybe it was confidential, top secret and on a need to know basis.
I'm pretty sure every starship captain would need to know this long before they actually came face to face with one.
Third season. GR was out fishing. Or maybe it was confidential, top secret and on a need to know basis.
I'm pretty sure every starship captain would need to know this long before they actually came face to face with one.
Well, Kirk & co. figured out how to counter the Romulan cloaking device and blew that Bird of Prey up real good, so yeah, I'd say that the Klingon ships were superior.Seemed like the Klingon ships were superior to the Romulan Bird of Prey from "Balance of Terror," so something the Romulans would want.
That was always my understanding, and it makes a lot of sense.Maybe the Romulans traded cloaking devices for Klingon ships and/or Klingon designs. It would explain how the Klingons got cloaking technology.
First background. John Ford in the Final Reflection suggests that MAM was impossible without Dilithium, and that tech was first used by Starfleet and the Klingons around twenty years before Kirk. Presumably before then, Warp Drive was achievable only by high power fusion reactors.
You'll let us know when you get your warp drive working, right?Honestly, a 1:1 ratio of matter to antimatter isn't really a good idea. Then you just get pure gamma rays and pions, basically, which isn't very useful for thrust or energy channeling, so it would mostly just go to waste. It's better to have an excess of matter over antimatter, because the leftover matter is heated up by the energy of the reaction and thus can be used as reaction mass for thrusters or as plasma to transport energy. It's the same principle by which a nuclear or antimatter explosion in atmosphere is more destructive than one in vacuum. Instead of just a release of intangible radiation, you get a great deal of superhot, expanding, ionized gases that can do a lot more immediate physical damage (or in other words, perform a great deal more work).
So the "trick question" in the Academy entrance exam in TNG: "Coming of Age," with the answer being that 1:1 was the only possible matter-antimatter intermix ratio, was utter BS.
high energy (probably old and retired) MAM D7 cruisers
The only in-universe reason I can come up with based on what we saw in the show was that the Romulan ship seen in "Balance of Terror" was vastly inferior to Starfleet vessels in terms of speed or durability (other than its cloaking tech and plasma weapon), and they didn't have the infrastructure to build more advanced ships.
The simplest explanation is that they just bought the ships from the Klingons. It's not unprecedented for a nation with a lot of experience building naval vessels to sell them to another country.
IIRC from history class, part of the reason the Ottoman Empire sided against the UK in World War One was because the UK (specifically a racist military official named Winston Churchill) had reneged on a deal to supply the Ottomans with a pair of British-built warships, nationalizing them for the UK even though the Ottomans had already paid for them.
They don't even need to be D7s. Just because two vessels look similar, it doesn't have to mean that they are the same class, or the opposite; that two different looking ships have to be of a different class.
A question BoT does raise, though, is why the BoP with its weaknesses was employed by itself, instead of in numbers. They should have had some idea of Federation defensive capabilities. Enterprise would certainly have had her hands full if there was another cloaked Romulan around in BoT.
But there had been no contact with the Romulans until this incident, or vice versa. So neither side knew of the capability of the other. For all we know, the Romulans considered the one BoP with its weapon and cloak to be more than a match for anything Starfleet threw against them.
Not to be pedantic, but the answer is because The Enemy Below depicted a one-on-one engagement, and changing so fundamental an element would have upset the process of adapting The Enemy Below blow-by-blow into "Balance of Terror," which is basically what Paul Schneider did.A question BoT does raise, though, is why the BoP with its weaknesses was employed by itself, instead of in numbers. They should have had some idea of Federation defensive capabilities. Enterprise would certainly have had her hands full if there was another cloaked Romulan around in BoT.
It's threads like this one asks the hard questions, I can't think, for the life of me, a reason why the Romulans would use Klingon ships... with a cloaking device. The new writing team of the 3rd season didn't do their homework on how inferior that device was. Now it seems the device can do things which would make a ship invincible.We know the real world story why the Romulans were using the Klingon ship - the Romulan warbird model was lost/destroyed.
But real world stinks. Who cares! This a Star Trek board!
What in universe reason led to the need /desire to use Klingon design for starships. Yes, we understand there was an alliance, but that still does not answer the question as to why. Plenty of alliances did not result in one civilization adopting the tech designs of another.
Excellent question. The only in-universe reason I can come up with based on what we saw in the show was that the Romulan ship seen in "Balance of Terror" was vastly inferior to Starfleet vessels in terms of speed or durability (other than its cloaking tech and plasma weapon), and they didn't have the infrastructure to build more advanced ships. Ergo, they turned to the other major power who seemed to be equal to the Federation in terms of ship tech.
But that also brings up another question: Did the Romulans actually build their own ships based on the Klingons' designs and tech, or did they buy (or steal) the ships? The original idea in BoT was that the BoP was going to resemble the Enterprise's saucer section because the Romulans stole Starfleet designs. So did the Romulans steal the Klingon designs as well? Or even steal their ships? Spock's line, "The Romulans are now using Klingon designs" is unfortunately too ambiguous to be able to determine that. At one point I would have said that the Romulans traded their own designs and tech to the Klingons, per the Klingon cloaked BoP in STIII. But then both ENT and DSC establish that Klingons had both cloak tech and BoPs a long time ago.
Why is it so hard to believe that the Romulans had improved their cloaking device since "Balance of Terror"?It's threads like this one asks the hard questions, I can't think, for the life of me, a reason why the Romulans would use Klingon ships... with a cloaking device. The new writing team of the 3rd season didn't do their homework on how inferior that device was. Now it seems the device can do things which would make a ship invincible.
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