The ONLY canon reference to warp 10 being impossible was in Voyager, which was after All Good Things came out. As far as TNG is concerned, the warp scales might as well be exactly the same; the Enterprise-Nil could do warp 8 in a pinch and warp 9 if they were desperate to the point of being suicidal; Enterprise-D can do warp 9 relatively easily and can even sustain it for a good chunk of time.From the days of Kirk, when the breaking point for the old USS Enterprise was just past Warp Factor 14.1, the scalet was redrawn at some point so that by the days of Picard, Warp 10 was "basically impossible". However in the future, from Picard's point of view, they have seems that can go warp 13 like it is normal, and he doesn't question it. This implies that there was a technological breakthrough that allowed that speed to be possible. Either by breaking through the impossible warp 10, or redrawing the scale so that a warp 13 was possible again (because in all seriousness, who wants to keep giving orders for warp 9.975 all day long, when warp 13 is faster to say)
From the days of Kirk, when the breaking point for the old USS Enterprise was just past Warp Factor 14.1, the scalet was redrawn at some point so that by the days of Picard, Warp 10 was "basically impossible". However in the future, from Picard's point of view, they have seems that can go warp 13 like it is normal, and he doesn't question it. This implies that there was a technological breakthrough that allowed that speed to be possible. Either by breaking through the impossible warp 10, or redrawing the scale so that a warp 13 was possible again (because in all seriousness, who wants to keep giving orders for warp 9.975 all day long, when warp 13 is faster to say)
Dig that crazy Monty Python reference.She turned me into a newt.
I got better.
Is there an actual show or script that says warp 10 (warp 9.999999 +1) is impossible or occupying the entire universe?
Or was this something dreamed up by a would be canon writer?
PARIS: Okay, okay. We'll tell you. We're trying to break the maximum warp barrier.
KIM: Nothing in the universe can go warp ten. It's a theoretical impossibility. In principle, if you were ever to reach warp ten, you'd be travelling at infinite velocity.
NEELIX: Infinite velocity. Got it. So that means very fast.
PARIS: It means that you would occupy every point in the universe simultaneously. In theory, you could go any place in the wink of an eye. Time and distance would have no meaning.
(See Douglas Adams for further details.)
KIM: If Voyager achieved warp ten, we could be home in as long as it takes to push a button.
NEELIX: Wow! And you're working on this?
PARIS: We discovered a new form of dilithium in the asteroid field we surveyed last month. It remains stable at a much higher warp frequency.
KIM: The problem is, every time we simulate crossing the transwarp threshold, the nacelles get torn off the ship.
Threshold.
Transwarp = Warp 10.
Transwarp conduits are gates and tunnels bridging through transwarp space.
Building a conduit takes a while.
Using a pre-existing conduit reduces travel time to almost zero... Sometimes.
The pre-existing conduit in Descent took zero time, but it took Janeway 2 hours to voyage 30 thousand light years in Endgame using a pre-existing conduit attached to the Borg transwarp Hub.
Gene did love an edict..........I remember when warp was c cubed and transwarp was to the 4th power.
I also miss when the STNG warp scale was briefly considered transwarp as a faster scale.
i think that was all changed by the end of season 1 STNG with a Roddenberry edict of some sort. The memory fades a bit..
That was from FASA's original TNG Officer's Manual. I've used that fifth-power scale in my old fanfics because I found both the TOS and TNG warp scales far too slow for dramatic purposes and not really keeping well at all with onscreen material anyway.I recall one of the last FASA RPG sourcebooks for Star Trek had the TNG era ships as warp speed to the fifth power compared to Kirk's time when it was warp factor cubed. Thus at warp 10 you could literally cross the Milky Way galaxy in a year going at 100,000 times the speed of light. Which would fit the starship that is designated as Galaxy-class. That the ship couldn't quite make that was acceptable. Cruising at around warp 8 would still get the Enterprise-D across the galaxy in a little over three years time.
VOY probably did more than any other series to establish some kind of consistency with warp speeds. Sure, the Voyager moved at speed-of-plot like every other hero ship, but the series did a pretty good job of keeping the ship well within the Delta Quadrant until the very end, whereas other ships could go from [INSERT NAME HERE] back to Earth within any given episode.Poor USS Voyager was stuck with the fastest eco-drives in the galaxy thanks to the "Warp drive damages subspace" lobbyist.
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