Oh good grief. Gary Seven had transporter capability at his command, you know.
I'm sorry, I'm just not seeing where you're not being a Tellarite now.
Your advanced thruster idea is non-Newtonian, which is basically the same thing as antigrav.
Well, no.
Well, yes. If it isn't Newtonian, it's the same magic mumbo-jumbo. There's a difference between useful nitpicking and pointless argument. I mean hell, you then go on to admit that you're just arguing some nuance:
An antigrav would negate the pull of gravity enough to allow a space craft to maneuver the same way it would in zero gravity. This won't actually provide any motion to the space craft, only static lift to defy local gravity.
This is probably a feature of a ship's inertial dampeners, not "antigrav" per se.
So in other words,
basically the same thing as antigrav, like I said . . . a non-Newtonian ascent involving no or little thrust in the complete drive system.
And yes I know about the belt. That doesn't disprove gravity control despite your peculiar claim.
Never claimed it does. I'm saying the BOOTS aren't part of a gravity control system, they're just thrusters.
Which I have already showed you, so why keep talking about it? Stop arguing the point. I brought up the boots as yet another counterpoint to your claim that nobody ever thought to combine thrusters and antigrav pre-Voyager. You admit that these rocket boots had an antigrav component as part of the complete system, yet you keep trying to argue.
The details can be different, but the fact remains that we have antigrav in use supporting thrusting objects decades before Voyager. Hell, the damn NX shuttlepods don't kick up enough dust either, even if we assume them to be no more massive than a car.
You can argue the terminology all you like, but the fact remains that these ships do not land by Newtonian thrust, and therefore your claims about masses being too high on my page based on your own presumptions that the Danube can land and take off by thrusters are invalid.
Nimbus III didn't even kick up dust . . . it's more like a gas leak. That's not thrust.
To be sure, it's bad special effects (of the type prevalent in STV, including Spock's boots). But the intention is there.
Bull. I can just as easily say it was "intended" to be simple outgassing, so "ha!".
Don't try to take this into some "intention" crap. I know that's the sort of hocus-pocus some of the folks at TrekBBS like to pull when they can't prove their case, but I won't stand for it.
If it was the exhaust from any other type of ICBM, it would have been full of corpses.
Bull. I wouldn't want to be under it, but there's no evidence that the modified rocket would be lethal at that location, and indeed we can pretty well prove that it wasn't by virtue of the movie.
We can chalk this up to tricks of the throttle and plume redirect, or what-have-you, but the fact remains that this is presented as a rocket,
unlike Trek ships taking off, which are most certainly not presented as anything remotely resembling a rocket.
Thus your claim about masses is disproved yet again.
Anyway, will you now acknowledge that your claim of thruster plume proving lower vessel density/mass is false?
What the hell does thruster plumes have to do with anything? If you go back to my original claim, I described that the EXISTENCE of those thrusters and the way they are used essentially requires a lower mass rating for smaller craft; certainly significantly less than 600 tons for a runabout (or even 24 tons for a small shuttlecraft). That would require either the installation of curiously powerful thrusters or negate the utility of thrusters in the first place.
And I say you're dead wrong, because you're claiming a lack of antigravity technology (or technology of similar effect, whether you want to nitpick and call it inertial dampening or what-have-you, it's the same bloody non-Newtonian magic) in Star Trek pre-Voyager when I've gone and shown you that it's always been there.
Thus, your claim that the thruster effects show lesser mass is
wrong.
The shows give stated masses. You are arguing against them based on your own
presumptions about creator intent
without evidence, your own
presumptions about the use of thrusters to lift a Danube to orbit
without evidence, and your own
fallacious personal incredulity, which is not an argument.
Your belief or consent is
not required, and your incessantly argumentative behavior makes it clear it will not be obtained. I've been very patient as you've tried every conceivable method to argue against the masses given
in the show, but your pointless argumentation against every single utterance makes it clear you are simply being pedantic and not engaged in any honest inquiry. So, stop wasting my time.
The masses and densities stand, as does my page.
To any who are reading, my apologies for NewType's behavior, and my own in response. Please know that if you have any honest questions about the Volumetrics page or note any real flaw, you are cordially invited to ask away.