If shields are supposed to protect a ship from weapons fire then how come phasers and photon torpedos can be fired from a ship with it's shields up easily, since they have to pass through the shields....
Huntingdon said:
Indications in The Wounded, and a DS9 episode (The Jemh'dar?), suggest things can pass through the shields if they are generating the same frequency. Presumably the phasers and torpedos are linked to the shield nutation - although you'd wonder why the enemy ship couldn't analyse it and adjust shields to the reverse.
I think you're on the right track.uss_griffin said:It's always somewhat confusing as to which system is meant.
Agreed. Which is why I always smile in those TOS episodes where Sulu mentions "Our deflectors just went up. Something's approaching us..." like the shields actually know there's a problem before the CREW knows. I figure it's like one of those car alarms that can't tell the difference between a crow bar and a falling pine cone hitting its windshield; the automatic deflector shield (which does make one appearance in TNG "The Arsenal of Freedom") probably has all kinds of false alarms, like when the ship passes too close to a Coronal Mass Ejection or momentarily crosses the beam of a distant pulsar, the deflectors snap on, and after a few seconds the tactical officer announces, "Automatic deflector screens just went up. No problem, just a solar flare."uss_griffin said:
Actually, I think the notion of manually raising and lowering shields is a little silly.
Well for deflectors, I think it simply makes more sense that outgoing energy beams don't have to worry about being deflected in the first place, since the lines of force would be arranged only to divert INCOMING particles; the tactical officer might have to slightly adjust his aim to compensate for some drift by the energy field, but it wouldn't be really noticeable.uss_griffin said:
Firing through this type of system would simply require passing the weapon characteristics and trajectory to the deflector network, configuring it not to fire its deflector beams at the outbound weapon.
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