I suppose this happens in all the series, but TNG pops in my head when I think of this...
Someone (usually Riker) calls for Red Alert.
And he'll shout "Red Alert! Shields up! Arm all phasers, load all torpedo bays!" and so on.
But isn't the purpose of saying "Red Alert" a shorthand way of issuing all those battle-ready commands?
In an urgent crisis situation, saying "Red Alert" is the quick way to command the ship to battle-readiness.
Going over and above-- with the deflector orders, ordering the torpedo tubes loaded, having the phasers charged-- isn't that all covered when he simply said "Red Alert"?
I see it like ordering someone to report to the bridge...
then also ordering him to leave his quarters,
proceed down the corridor,
ordering him to take the turbolift, etc.
Yeah... report to the bridge is sufficient. Got it.
Red Alert.
Raise shields, charge phasers. Got it already!
Someone (usually Riker) calls for Red Alert.
And he'll shout "Red Alert! Shields up! Arm all phasers, load all torpedo bays!" and so on.
But isn't the purpose of saying "Red Alert" a shorthand way of issuing all those battle-ready commands?
In an urgent crisis situation, saying "Red Alert" is the quick way to command the ship to battle-readiness.
Going over and above-- with the deflector orders, ordering the torpedo tubes loaded, having the phasers charged-- isn't that all covered when he simply said "Red Alert"?
I see it like ordering someone to report to the bridge...
then also ordering him to leave his quarters,
proceed down the corridor,
ordering him to take the turbolift, etc.
Yeah... report to the bridge is sufficient. Got it.
Red Alert.
Raise shields, charge phasers. Got it already!