So, there's always been something I've wondered about the battle in the Mutara Nebula during TWOK.
In the very first exchange of fire after the two ships have entered the nebula, the Enterprise has maneuvered to the Reliant's flank, both ships fire at each other unsuccessfully. The Enterprise fires first, with a phaser spread that goes wide to the Reliant's port side. Khan replies with an aft torpedo shot that completely misses the Enterprise, which has already veered away in anticipation of the shot.
During this phase, Kirk tells Sulu "best guess...fire when ready" because we have just learned that the phaser lock is inoperative. Sulu puts his hand on what looks like the left side portion of the helm console and, just then, the ship shudders and the phasers go wide of target.
Are we supposed to infer that Sulu hit the "fire" key before he planned on it because of the turbulence...that the turbulence jolted him just enough to press the key before he had the ship lined up correctly? I have always wondered that. We don't really get any turbulence any other times while they are in the nebula...so it's not totally obvious to me.
Thoughts / insights?
In the very first exchange of fire after the two ships have entered the nebula, the Enterprise has maneuvered to the Reliant's flank, both ships fire at each other unsuccessfully. The Enterprise fires first, with a phaser spread that goes wide to the Reliant's port side. Khan replies with an aft torpedo shot that completely misses the Enterprise, which has already veered away in anticipation of the shot.
During this phase, Kirk tells Sulu "best guess...fire when ready" because we have just learned that the phaser lock is inoperative. Sulu puts his hand on what looks like the left side portion of the helm console and, just then, the ship shudders and the phasers go wide of target.
Are we supposed to infer that Sulu hit the "fire" key before he planned on it because of the turbulence...that the turbulence jolted him just enough to press the key before he had the ship lined up correctly? I have always wondered that. We don't really get any turbulence any other times while they are in the nebula...so it's not totally obvious to me.
Thoughts / insights?