Why didn't the Pegasus just explode when it was starting to rephase inside that asteroid? I mean, I love how it looked embedded in the rock, but it just never made sense to me.
But there was a war.
What power can the Romulans Lord over the Federation, that the Federation cower before them so often.
They've been caught plotting to destroy of capture the enterprise numerous times.
When Picard caught them testing their own phasing cloak, what was there reaction? kindly receive Picard's aid and then destroy his ship, and kill everyone on board.
I thought this was what was being suggested, too. Although it's difficult to tell.
What I can't fathom is why the gravitational pull of the asteroid ought to be a problem. Surely the engines of the starship can compensate for it? I mean, they explicitly can compensate for the pull of a black hole! Just coping with the stresses of atmospheric flight above a Class M planet ought to be orders of magnitude more demanding than negotiating the pull of a bit of floating rock, or even shrugging off the crushing force of the asteroid possibly collapsing on the ship.
Timo Saloniemi
I can't think of any other episodes off the top of my head where I thought they should have separated the ship.
I also don't agree with your 3rd option that you suggest here. The reason being is twofold: the primary reason why I think they should have separated the ship is because Picard was strongly against taking the Enterprise into the asteroid because of the risk to the ship. The saucer section is where most of the people (civilians) live. The drive section is mainly engineering, cargo bays, and other operational areas, etc. Taking the saucer into the asteroid would presumably still put a lot of people at risk, defeating the purpose. The second reason is because they need the power of the warp drive to prevent possibly being overpowered by the gravitational field of the asteroid.
They were concerned about going INSIDE of the asteroid because to Data's knowledge no starship had ever been taken inside a large celestial body like that. There could be things going on inside, both gravitational and magnetic, that are unknown. In fact this could very well be true in reality, let alone in Star Trek.
The saucer does have warp drive - in the pilot episode already, it matches the performance of the stardrive section in racing to Deneb IV after the altercation with Q. Or, it is late by a few hours, but not by decades, as it necessarily would be if it lacked warp drive altogether. And in "Arsenal of Freedom", the saucer embarks on an interstellar journey towards the nearest starbase, without requiring or getting as much as a push from the stardrive section.
Neither of the examples fits that model - in fact, both directly establish the model as false.
In "Encounter at Farpoint", the saucer quite explicitly stayed a full hour at warp, not mere minutes. That is, the combined ship was traveling towards Deneb IV; the threat of Q made her flee in the opposite direction (we saw the U-turn) at extreme warp for several minutes at least; and then the saucer separated. One hour later, the saucer made it to Deneb IV orbit nevertheless, having traveled the distance of several extreme-warp-minutes in a matter of one hour. (And yes, the saucer may have spent some of that hour at impulse. But the more, the greater this makes its warp performance in compensation.)
In "Arsenal of Freedom", the saucer received no warp boost from the stardrive section. If it were technically possible to give such a boost, LaForge should be hanged, drawn and quartered and then shot twice for failing to provide the boost.
The former episode establishes significant warp performance for the saucer (which the dialogue implied was separated at warp, even though the visuals show the separation taking place at impulse). The latter established the ability of the saucer to accelerate to interstellar speeds all on its own, plus the inability to benefit from stardrive boost.
Timo Saloniemi
For the sake of curiosity, why didn't they build other models with the ability to separate?Also it was the 7-foot model that could only separate, and I think the 7-footer was in storage by the time of The Pegasus. Plus in The Best Of Both Worlds and even later in Generations the majority of the separation sequence seen was done with stock footage from Encounter At Farpoint.
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