Real life question: why couldn't the smaller model separate? From the various articles I have read it seems that they did not use separation in later episodes because it did not have this ability.
According to the "Star Trek: The Next Generation Writers' Technical Manual, Fourth Season Edition" by Rick Sternbach and Mike Okuda, the saucer has no warp capability. So separating at warp means that the stardrive section must slow down to allow the saucer to 'pull away".To my knowledge, the separation mechanic was unique to the six foot model. The four foot and two foot models were not built to have saucer separation. Still would like to in-universe if the saucer section had warp drive.
So, in-universe it should be considered a little more than a big lifeboat (because, really, how long the saucer could survive in a battle) ?According to the "Star Trek: The Next Generation Writers' Technical Manual, Fourth Season Edition" by Rick Sternbach and Mike Okuda, the saucer has no warp capability. So separating at warp means that the stardrive section must slow down to allow the saucer to 'pull away".
"When separated from the battle section (which contains the warp drive), the Saucer section is incapable of warp speed. The saucer section does have its own set of impulse engines for slower-than-light travel, and it has a complete set of deflector shields and phaser banks. When separation occurs at warp speed, the residual warp fields can take several minutes to fully collapse, so the primary hull can "coast" for some distance before it goes sublight. Control of the saucer section is managed from the main bridge."
And I already have a problem with standard lifeboats as depicted in Star Trek, since they have no warp drive and I'm not sure if they even have impulse drive. They're small and seem to operate on the assumption that the people inside will be rescued shortly from whatever planet or region of space the pod ends up in. In the empty vastness of space, that seems like a big assumption.So, in-universe it should be considered a little more than a big lifeboat (because, really, how long the saucer could survive in a battle) ?
I’d rather vapourise instantly than die of thirst^Beats death by warp core breach.
Which, whether or not saucer separation generally made much sense, was a literal lifesaver in GEN. I'd argue that all by itself demonstrated that the ability to do so was a good idea.
According to the TNG Technical Manual, they have at least impulse enginesAnd I already have a problem with standard lifeboats as depicted in Star Trek, since they have no warp drive and I'm not sure if they even have impulse drive. They're small and seem to operate on the assumption that the people inside will be rescued shortly from whatever planet or region of space the pod ends up in. In the empty vastness of space, that seems like a big assumption.
I’d rather vapourise instantly than die of thirst
I wish the nacelles had more detail there--less blank
Escaping in a shuttle seems ideal, just replicate yourself hamburgers and Romulan ale ad infinitum and sit on the space couch.We've seen plenty of examples of people being saved from lifepods or them making their way to planets, so they're apparently doing their job. Somehow.
And I already have a problem with standard lifeboats as depicted in Star Trek, since they have no warp drive and I'm not sure if they even have impulse drive. They're small and seem to operate on the assumption that the people inside will be rescued shortly from whatever planet or region of space the pod ends up in. In the empty vastness of space, that seems like a big assumption.
Yeah, it puts the fiction in science-fiction.Doesn't a ship usually send out a distress beacon before it explodes? Plus space tends to be fairly busy in Star Trek.
In "The Battle," Picard says the survivors of the Stargazer were drifting in space for "weeks" before they were rescued.
That just means the "Life Boats" were a Plan-B escape method.Weeks is still pretty good considering they're in space. Plus that also means those "life boats" have a way to keep people alive for weeks.
Obviously those plans changed once they stopped putting family on board StarFleet ships.
Hopefully that is more a older teenager situation like Wesley Crusher situation and not an entire elementary school on board.Did they ever stop completely? There sure are kids on, at least, some Starships in Lower Decks.
But nonessential personnel would include the three unfrozen 1990s civilians, and then the businessman couldn't have called the Romulans on their BS. Also, Data wouldn't have been offered a place on a tour.
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