What they should of done is got Nimoy to say aload of new dialog when they were remastering the BOT episode...
What they should of done is got Nimoy to say aload of new dialog when they were remastering the BOT episode...
The Romulans used the Remans in the Dominion War, at least once in a command position. The Romulans might have crewed their starships with various intelligent species from within their Empire, some of their ships might have had the entire command staff consist of non-Romulans.
4. The notion that 23rd Century Romulan ships are powered by 'simple impulse.'
Silly why? Photonic weapons were usually depicted as fairly weak, nukes being more powerful and proven old technology. I have no problem with ships firing torpedoes with giga-tonnes warheads.
This explained perfectly how the Romulans were able to fight the war on "simple impulse engines".
The problem is, that the gigaton nuke would have a weight around hundreds of tons.
As for impulse drives being FTL drives... Naah. This is never explicitly supported in TOS, and there's no reason to assume implicit support. Writer intent at the time was simply for warp to be fast and for impulse to be slow, but very soon after TOS this was refined to warp being FTL and impulse being STL, and we shouldn't postulate a contradiction or change between TOS and the rest of Trek when we don't have to.
For all we know, standard shuttles already weigh thousands of tons.
My thought on impulse is that there are two facets to it: the first is that it is a fusion-reactor power system that operates in adjunct and primary backup to the main energizer, which is the anti-matter / dilithium channeling power system.
Oh, and how did those guys get back down to Montana? That was never addressed. ICBM's weren't originally made for soft landings.![]()
The whole drive system discussion brings up another plot hole from First Contact as well: it stands to reason that impulse power and impulse drive would exist before Cochrane's warp drive experiment. Why on Earth, in that case, would you need a chem-rocket powered ICBM to achieve orbit for a warp drive test.
You misunderstood. I mean that the impulse POWER - i.e. energy (plasma), produced by fusion reaction, could be used to power warp coils as well as the matter/antimatter plasma.
This couldn't be. Unless their hulls are pure neutronium.
it stands to reason that impulse power and impulse drive would exist before Cochrane's warp drive experiment. Why on Earth, in that case, would you need a chem-rocket powered ICBM to achieve orbit for a warp drive test.
Morevoer, we knew, that the nuclear thermal rockets existed: the DY-100 series (like "Botany Bay") was driven by fission engines.
Oh, certainly. Or even better, Romulans might have used artificial quantum singularities as their high-output power system from the 22nd (or perhaps 13th!) century on. The technology would be utterly unrecognizable to Scotty, but would explain why the Romulan ship in fact flies at reasonably high speed and has more firepower than Kirk could ever dream of and operates an invisibility
Not the hulls, but the warp coils. After all, the NCC-1701 in TOS is canonically impossibly massive ("nearly a million gross tons"), and so is the Voyager ("700,000 tons"). It would be quite odd for the shuttles not to follow suit, as they are supposedly built of the very same components as the big ships.
A chemical rocket? The ICBM outperformed current rocket technology at least tenfold: fantastic single-stage acceleration to escape velocity with a payload as big as said stage, all without breaking any glasses in the nearbly bar shack. That must have been Trek magic at work, and quite unlikely to be "chemical" in nature.
Not as far as any of the characters would have indicated. "Old type atomic power" is the phrasing used, but there was no discussion on the actual drive system. Certainly we saw no rocket nozzles on the ship. Nor any fuel tanks for that matter (Khan's sleeping shelves must have been in those containers as the pencil hull would be too small to accommodate the space implied by the set).
Nor any fuel tanks for that matter (Khan's sleeping shelves must have been in those containers as the pencil hull would be too small to accommodate the space implied by the set).
(Khan's sleeping shelves must have been in those containers as the pencil hull would be too small to accommodate the space implied by the set).
with that kind of powerplant the Romulan Empire would not lose the war
It's like suggest that the pinnace onboard the 50000 ton battleship must be at least 500 ton in displacement, because she's composed of the same materials and used the same components.
One question: are you sure that "Phoenix" reached escape velocity on her ICBM booster?
Basically because they never showed "Botany Bay" from rear.
On studio model, the exaust nossles of some sort are clearly visible. Let's not forget, it's a deep space ship, and her engines are suited for vacuum only, not atmosphere.
There are plenty space for another two rows of containers, forward and rearward of the existent ring. The missing containers probably were fuel tanks, that were ejected after the fuel supply for acceleration was exausted.
The hull of DY-100 is comparable in thickness with the disk hoop of "Enterprise"'s saucer
Why not? We don't really know it would be better than Federation-style dilithium/antimatter powerplants.
That's exactly what would happen if the pinnacle also had gun turrets.
Both ships and shuttles have engine nacelles, and those nacelles supposedly contain the most alien of the technologies aboard (after transporters). It makes little sense to attribute the extra mass of starships to things like hull or computers, so the warp coils sound like an attractive choice. And the shuttles have those, or then (as per some TNG graphics) impulse coils amounting to the same thing.
Absolutely sure. The imagery of the test rig separating from the booster shows a fantastically aggressive escape trajectory, with the rig already essentially halfway to the moon.
Those "nozzles" certainly rule out any sort of NTR ever devised...
Other types of rocket where atomic power accelerates propellant to Newtonian purposes are of course possible.
That'd be more plausible if we didn't have Rain Robinson's model and the "First Flight" photo for a DY-100 type craft taking off with the Khan Khontainer Khonfiguration.
Which is why it won't quite suffice for the wide deck implied by the set.
The romulan war ENT books go by the theory.. Perhaps worried that a BSG computer virus would be sent.Okay.Certainly the ship they encountered in BOT was.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.