If your ship can cruise at Warp 9.99 for days on end, on my Warp Factor Scale 3.0 (My Scale = TNG Warp Scale with the hand drawn curve to infinity past Warp Factor 9 deleted. I just let the #'s run naturally according to the original TNG Warp Factor formula).
@ Warp 9.99 ~= Warp Factor 27 ~= 56,084 c
I know what it says.Warp 9.99 is 7,912c according to the Star Trek Encyclopedia and the behind-the-scenes Enterprise-D and Voyager technical documentation provided to the writing team.
I know what it says.
https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Warp_factor
But compared to what Tom Paris referenced Warp 9.9 as on screen in the ep "The 37's"
"about 4 billion miles (0.0007 light years) in 1 second" ~= 21,473c
And Tom Paris generally knows his piloting knowledge and stats.
Plus the curve to infinity past Warp 9 on the TNG Warp Factor scale is literally hand drawn.
So it's a bit Timey/Wimey/Wibbley/Wobbly.
I wouldn't put much stock on the Reference manual when they aren't willing to use their existing consistent formula past Warp 9.
I'd rather use on-screen Cannon at that point when they have a critical main character state the actual speed of Warp 9.9.
I then used Tom Paris stated speed and made proportional adjustments based on what the TNG Technical Manual states and what Tom Paris states.
IMO, on-screen Canon is Stronger & more valid than TNG Tech Manuals.
Especially when it comes to a main character talking about their profession (Tom Paris / Piloting).
Didn't Terry Matalas post that Starfleet, as of 2401, is unable to recover from the loss of Utopia Planitia? Hence the Titan-recycling because they cannot make new parts.
Tom Paris once reached "Infinite Speed", and in doing so evolved himself into a non-sentient giant salamander. To me, that makes his knowledge/opinion on warp travel somewhat suspect![]()
There is also the fact that Voyager writers sucked with tech/science stuff in general and I'd trust the Tech manuals more then a throw away line from a Voyager episode written by Jerri Taylor and Brannon Braga of all people, but really the whole salamander thing really speaks for itself![]()
Didn't Terry Matalas post that Starfleet, as of 2401, is unable to recover from the loss of Utopia Planitia? Hence the Titan-recycling because they cannot make new parts.
Perhaps most of the shipyards in the UPF make ships for their systems. Retooling for Starfleet ships would be time consuming.
I know what it says.
https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Warp_factor
But compared to what Tom Paris referenced Warp 9.9 as on screen in the ep "The 37's"
"about 4 billion miles (0.0007 light years) in 1 second" ~= 21,473c
And Tom Paris generally knows his piloting knowledge and stats.
Plus the curve to infinity past Warp 9 on the TNG Warp Factor scale is literally hand drawn.
So it's a bit Timey/Wimey/Wibbley/Wobbly.
I wouldn't put much stock on the Reference manual when they aren't willing to use their existing consistent formula past Warp 9.
I'd rather use on-screen Cannon at that point when they have a critical main character state the actual speed of Warp 9.9.
I then used Tom Paris stated speed and made proportional adjustments based on what the TNG Technical Manual states and what Tom Paris states.
IMO, on-screen Canon is Stronger & more valid than TNG Tech Manuals.
Especially when it comes to a main character talking about their profession (Tom Paris / Piloting).
That seems...problematic somehow, as others have noted.
Just look at that Memory Alpha chart you're cherry-picking a Tom Paris quote from. Canonically warp speeds are all over the bloody place. Please explain why warp 9.975 is canonically slower than warp 9.9 based on what we are repeatedly told about Voyager's top speed on-screen. Never mind that Paris's comment is the outlier here, and he can't even decide if he was expelled from the Academy or not (cf. "Drive").
IMO, that speaks more like they tripped/stumbled into something accidentally than makes his knowledge/opinion on warp travel suspect.Tom Paris once reached "Infinite Speed", and in doing so evolved himself into a non-sentient giant salamander. To me, that makes his knowledge/opinion on warp travel somewhat suspect![]()
They usually have Technical Writers to handle the technical writing, no matter the Trek Series.There is also the fact that Voyager writers sucked with tech/science stuff in general and I'd trust the Tech manuals more then a throw away line from a Voyager episode written by Jerri Taylor and Brannon Braga of all people, but really the whole salamander thing really speaks for itself![]()
The Milky Way Galaxy is FAR larger than what is shown on the 2D map.While UFP could probably predict various environmental conditions in many parts of space given their current level of knowledge and automation for R&D (computerised) and devise means of protection, the problem is, their knowledge of the Milky Way alone was not really 'complete' (at least it wasn't in the 24th century - perhaps by the mid/late 25th century it was).
Space is 3D and FAR larger in Dimension and volume than what is shown on the 2D map.- Size of UFP Territory and how long to traverse from one end to another -
According to some basic calculations, on the 2D planar Galactic Map that roughly corresponds to the Thin Disk area of the Milky Way where most of the major Star Systems resides.
The UFP has roughly these MAXIMUM Distance Values:
- 8103 ly distance from the (Galactic North-to-Galactic South)
- 5735 ly distance from the (Galactic East-to-Galactic West)
None of this is obviously factoring the 3rd Dimension and Territory in the Z-Axis.
Based on the Area of a 2D Square Plane for the Thin Disk's 100,000 ly section.
The UFP's 46,470,705 ly² ~= 0.46470705% of the Thin Disk 2D-Planar Area on the Galactic Map.
That's how insignificant the territory that the UFP holds in comparison to many of the larger powers. UFP basically has "< ½%" of 2D Planar Area on the Thin-Disk section
If you're going from the furthest point of the UFP's Galactic-North to the furthest point on the Galactic-South in a straight line on the map (Thin Disk section), that would be roughly 8103 ly.
@ slightly faster than Wf 9.9, you'd be able to cover all of that Vertical Galactic North-South travel within the UFP territory in ~135.05 days.
So you're absolutely right, it is ridiculous as to how far they portray distances and how fast the USS Titan-A is w/o using any of the Faster FTL drives that are available.
Normal Warp Drives at their level of tech, isn't fast enough in the late 24th century / Very Early 25th century.
It's not like the 32nd Century USS Discovery-A's level of Warp Drive which comes out to Wf 54-58 on my scale.
Assuming Discovery-A can sustain those High Wf's indefinitely as long as they have fuel, the Discovery-A could cross the Galactic North-South distances in ~4 days.
That's quite the far-cry in Warp Drive performance going from 24th Century to 32nd Century.
When you're talking "Infinite Speed" and being EVERY-WHERE in the Universe.In other words, there would have been no way for SF to create sufficient protection in the form of shielding that would insulate a pilot from a cosmic soup of anomalies and things that exist in the universe... at least not with their current level of knowledge.
For the original 75 year journey to even remotely make sense.A sustainable cruise velocity for VOY would have been Warp 9.5 (which is a greater uptick from Galaxy class maximum speed of Warp 9.6).
That's why I estimate Voyager had a true "Indefinite Cruise Speed" of Warp 8 provided you have enough fuel and aren't worrying about the Engines Thermal limits or stress that you put on it.- Voyager's Unscheduled 70,000 ly journey from the Delta Quadrant to home -
- Based on the on-screen estimates of 75 year journey has a average cruise speed of Warp 8 assuming unlimited fuel
- Warp 8 would take 68.36 years if non-stop with unlimited fuel, but given stops, repairs, exploration, etc. They probably rounded up to 75 years
- That means I can guess that Warp 8 was their cruise speed assuming unlimited fuel (A VERY Unrealistic Scenario)
- Galaxy Class initial Average Cruise speed was Warp 6, but later on became Warp 7
I concur on how fast Warp Factor 9.9 being ~21,473cAt any rate, the dialogue of 9.9 being 21,473c has more merit and being in line with the rest of TNG and DS9 Warp speeds than VOY having a sustainable cruise velocity of Warp 9.975 (which the ship was never actually seen as being used - dialogue always suggested maximum speeds being less than Warp 9.9).
9.975 might only be sustainable for minutes on end, not hrs like 9.75.So, VOY having a cruise velocity of 9.975 (which was only mentioned a few times but never seen in practice) didn't make sense... but rather, having Warp 9.75 as a temporarily sustainable maximum speed (which could be maintained for 12 hrs) DID make more sense.
"...massive refits..." When I read that post, what came to mind was the Excelsior II. Perhaps such a refit would be worthwhile, if one could get a serviceable ship faster than by building a completely new one.Starfleet seems to have got the fleet up and running again before the 25th century started. Though several designs looks like reconstructions of existing designs and may well be massive refits of older designs using new technologies
I have been having a problem trying to link to this video. The title is "The Constitution Class Refit from a Submariner's Perspective."
You're Welcome!Thanks, KamenRiderBlade.
Been thinking about tech levels, in regards to the Trek universe.
By the early 25th century several innovations may be starting to have a real impact, or are on the verge of having an impact. Positive...or negative. Possibilities that come to mind:
Early iterations of the SlipStream drive, similar to how Warp Drive was young and new during Jonathon Archer's era.1. Slipstream drive.
2. Artificial Intelligence (AI).
AI brings to mind multiple possible futures. Different scenarios:
Knight Rider & KITT?a. Biological beings develop symbiotic relationships with one or more types of AI.
Borg solution (Bad when forced upon a person who didn't ask for it)b. Biological beings merge with their machines.
That'd be nice as long as it's programmed to be friendly.c. AI have intelligence comparable to biological brains, and can act independently.
We'll see.d. A singularity occurs as AI ascends in intelligence above biological brains.
It's only bad if it's forced upon a biological person unwittingly.Scenario b. is basically the cyborg option. The Borg come to mind.
So basically Data / Synths, but hopefully raised to be friendly.Scenario c. is what I call the Cylon Problem. In a Trek context we get a number of different flavors of android; we also get ships run by AI, such as the M5 project, and the Texas class.
Romulans and their fear of AI / Sentient Mechanical Life.Scenario d. Civilizations of biological beings try to avoid AI super civilizations.
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