Makes me wonder if Spock still has a starship. I can think of no better place for Scotty to be, even if it's a private or ambassadorial craft
I wonder if Scotty ever found out that Spock & McCoy are still around, or that Kirk had returned from the Nexus (forgiving that he seemingly didn't recall having witnessed Kirk's loss on the Ent-B, for whatever reason, even though he fully recollected some random lad named Franklin)
Hey, someone had to bring it up.![]()
...even though he fully recollected some random lad named Franklin.
It's not strange, it's just a continuity error. Spock was supposed to be on the E-B before they changed it to Scotty after Nimoy shot it down. Taking the episode in the context it came out in 1992, Scotty's ship crashed well before there was a E-B in production, hence why he assumed that it had to be the E-A with Kirk because he couldn't imagine a new Enterprise being launched in such a short time (but again, he's not thinking about how long he was in the buffer, he still thinks he's in 2294).
Yeah, it's just strange show-internally. In the real world, it's not so much a matter of Scotty originally being written as being off the E-B, but of the whole E-B thing not having been written yet.It's not strange, it's just a continuity error.
That's the other weird thing. Why would a transport headed for an established colony hit a snag nobody else had hit yet - and would not hit again for almost a century?He probably never imagined being in the buffer for more than a few months before being rescued.
Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion wrote:
"The writer [Ron Moore] mentioned two scenes he hated to lose: the "It's green" Ten-Forward scene with Data originally written for Guinan before her schedule ruled it out, and a filmed but cut-for-time scene just before that showed Troi's visit with Scotty after his blowup with Geordi. At first taken with "the lass" and her charms, Scotty indignantly declares that he's "not crazy" and tells her "I know what I need and it's not here!" before stomping off to the lounge. The three-page scene also revealed that counselors have been assigned to starhsips for about forty years--and explains why he gives Troi a kiss in what now seems to be her first appearance at story's end."
Even now, we can detect planets orbiting stars light years away. A Dyson sphere is so big and it's the 24th century for crying out loud! It should be detectable half a quadrant away!
Even now, we can detect planets orbiting stars light years away. A Dyson sphere is so big and it's the 24th century for crying out loud! It should be detectable half a quadrant away!
But none of the methods we use today would work on a solid Dyson sphere.
All the methods depend on observing the star and divining the existence of the planet out of that. But the Dyson sphere obscures the star. So we can't observe any occultations (because there's only one, and it's permanent!), we can't observe any wobble (because even if the Dyson sphere were transparent, a symmetric sphere wouldn't cause the star to wobble), and we can't observe any deviations from the usual emission spectrum (because the only spectrum being emitted is the nearly undetectable infrared leaking from the sphere, and at best might make us mistake the star-and-sphere combo for a brown dwarf star).
We don't know why the Dyson sphere here causes a gravitic anomaly that brings transport ships out of warp. It's just a lump of mass, not particularly big in comparison with regular stars. But somehow it has gravity inside (and no, it doesn't come from rotation, for various reasons); perhaps this artificial gravity is anomalous enough to have that effect on ships warping nearby. But artificial gravity in Trek doesn't reach far; on starship decks, it seems to die out before it reaches the next deck! So it wouldn't be observable from afar.
Timo Saloniemi
Yeah, the continuity error is with Generations, one could say that "Relics" already established Scotty as leaving on the Jenol*n before there ever was an Enterprise-B.
I don't regret the fact that Scotty is there in Generations, but it was a perfectly avoidable problem. Generations co-writer was the sole writer of "Relics", after all; he changed the character to Scotty knowing full well it ignored his own earlier script.
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