The thing about the STXI trip is that "plot speed" there works on a couple of contradictory premises.
The dialogue suggests that the trip might have taken mere minutes. However, the series of events that take place during the trip suggests that several hours would be much preferable:
1) Kirk spends time sedated, then running around the huge, unfamiliar ship
2) McCoy changes clothes
3) People generally settle down
4) A fleet of ships reaches Vulcan and gets reduced to toothpicks
and perhaps most importantly
5) The reverse trip, chasing Nero, takes a significant amount of screen time!
What do we have on the other side of the balance, to suggest mere minutes?
1) Sulu says the ship has reached maximum speed, in the same scene that ends with them saying they'll reach Vulcan in a couple of minutes
2) Chekov only gives his informative briefing those precious few minutes before arrival, too
Now, these can probably be explained away: the new and untested ship might easily spend hours struggling up to full speed, until which time the crew would be too busy to worry about the upcoming mission's specifics. Clearly, neither Pike nor Chekov was in any real hurry to deliver the announcement even when there were only minutes until arrival at Vulcan - so we need not argue Pike would have asked Chekov to deliver the message immediately after leaving Earth.
Timo Saloniemi
The dialogue suggests that the trip might have taken mere minutes. However, the series of events that take place during the trip suggests that several hours would be much preferable:
1) Kirk spends time sedated, then running around the huge, unfamiliar ship
2) McCoy changes clothes
3) People generally settle down
4) A fleet of ships reaches Vulcan and gets reduced to toothpicks
and perhaps most importantly
5) The reverse trip, chasing Nero, takes a significant amount of screen time!
What do we have on the other side of the balance, to suggest mere minutes?
1) Sulu says the ship has reached maximum speed, in the same scene that ends with them saying they'll reach Vulcan in a couple of minutes
2) Chekov only gives his informative briefing those precious few minutes before arrival, too
Now, these can probably be explained away: the new and untested ship might easily spend hours struggling up to full speed, until which time the crew would be too busy to worry about the upcoming mission's specifics. Clearly, neither Pike nor Chekov was in any real hurry to deliver the announcement even when there were only minutes until arrival at Vulcan - so we need not argue Pike would have asked Chekov to deliver the message immediately after leaving Earth.
Timo Saloniemi