I didn't notice until a few weeks ago. Its a neat touch, and one of several ILM was careful to include. Another one I like is when the nacelles power down after the Warp Core is ejected. The "fins" retract and the engines go dark in the shot from behind the ship.
My only qualm with the thrusters is that they seem redundant. I always understood that the four (or eight counting top and bottom) RCS thruster quads on the saucer's out edges were the maneuvering thrusters. Now I wonder what those are.
I didn't notice until a few weeks ago. Its a neat touch, and one of several ILM was careful to include. Another one I like is when the nacelles power down after the Warp Core is ejected. The "fins" retract and the engines go dark in the shot from behind the ship.
My only qualm with the thrusters is that they seem redundant. I always understood that the four (or eight counting top and bottom) RCS thruster quads on the saucer's out edges were the maneuvering thrusters. Now I wonder what those are.
I'd say the thrusters we saw beyond the standard Quads may be for more radical maneuvering, or when an extra burst is needed, for instance to dodge debrit or push a livkely very heavy Starship out of a gravity well.
Andrew Probert designed something like that for the TMP ship, too: the yellow-coded maneuvering thruster clusters were accompanied by some heavier-duty rockets, in depressions looking like "NACA inlets" atop the secondary hull and thus close to the thrust line; apparently, they were for forward propulsion only.
Of course, for all we know, the TMP ship had other such thrusters elsewhere, under covers. Or then those "NACA inlet" things were something else altogether, despite the best intentions of the designer...
Timo Saloniemi
Guys, impulse engines aren't rockets. Thrusters are. I always assumed the impulse engines just send power to the warp coils, just not enough to get the ship over light speed.
That'd be the only way to explain why Kirk when stealing the Enterprise out of spacedock could order 1/4 impulse, and the ship went out backwards.
As it stands, impulse engines rarely (canonically) get the ship anywhere near light speed. In STXI it takes Kelvin sixty seconds to ram the Narada from a standing start something like six kilometers away; this gives you a terminal velocity of 200 to 300m/s when the ship finally impacts. Kirk's escape from space dock at "one quarter impulse power" has the ship departing at around 30mph. Likewise, Enterprise covers a distance of about 4000km in the three minutes and thirty seconds from the time Kirk orders "best possible speed," which directly implies accelerations between 5 and 15km/s^2, not too different from what you'd get from a conventional rocket engine.Guys, impulse engines aren't rockets. Thrusters are. I always assumed the impulse engines just send power to the warp coils, just not enough to get the ship over light speed.
My only qualm with the thrusters is that they seem redundant. I always understood that the four (or eight counting top and bottom) RCS thruster quads on the saucer's out edges were the maneuvering thrusters. Now I wonder what those are.
You don't think the impulse engines themselves provide thrust? Just that they send power to the warp coils... Ok, first, then why exactly do the impulse engines always have that glowing red area that is exposed to the outside of the ship? Not to mention, on the Enterprise D there are 3 impulse engines shown. The main impulse engine located at the base of the neck facing aft, and the two on the rear edge of the saucer facing aft. Now if those only propel the ship by providing power to the warp coils... then how is the Enterprise D supposed to move while the saucer is separated? Thrusters only? And why would they put them on the saucer if it could be separated?Guys, impulse engines aren't rockets. Thrusters are. I always assumed the impulse engines just send power to the warp coils, just not enough to get the ship over light speed.
That'd be the only way to explain why Kirk when stealing the Enterprise out of spacedock could order 1/4 impulse, and the ship went out backwards.
Ok, first, then why exactly do the impulse engines always have that glowing red area that is exposed to the outside of the ship?
Ok, first, then why exactly do the impulse engines always have that glowing red area that is exposed to the outside of the ship?
...And, interestingly enough, these things glow brightly even when the ship isn't moving at all. (Or at least not accelerating at all, for you Newtonian relativity purists). That more or less rules them out as rocket nozzles.
We know a ship can go to warp without impulse engines, as in "Obsession". We know a ship can go to impulse without warp engines, as is evidenced in every second Trek space battle. That sort of suggests that the systems are independent of each other. But it doesn't rule out the possibility of some sort of an interconnect for extra power, or in emergencies, or something special like that.
Timo Saloniemi
Not necessarily. Technically, there's no reason for the engines to glow AT ALL, even if they do provide newtonian thrust. Unless of course the nozzle elements also double as heatsinks for the fusion reactors, in which case the only time they would NOT glow is when the reactors are shut down.Ok, first, then why exactly do the impulse engines always have that glowing red area that is exposed to the outside of the ship?
...And, interestingly enough, these things glow brightly even when the ship isn't moving at all. (Or at least not accelerating at all, for you Newtonian relativity purists). That more or less rules them out as rocket nozzles.
ACTUALLY, the Enterprise-D's secondary impulse engines on the back edge of the saucer were constantly dark. not to mention, I didn't say anything about the glow meaning it was in the middle of providing thrust, I was simply pointing out that it has an area specifically exposed to the outside of the ship, when, if it was simply to create power, it wouldn't need to be, and could be kept inside the center where it would probably be more protected. I only mentioned the glowing part to help reference that section I was talking about....And, interestingly enough, these things glow brightly even when the ship isn't moving at all. (Or at least not accelerating at all, for you Newtonian relativity purists). That more or less rules them out as rocket nozzles.Ok, first, then why exactly do the impulse engines always have that glowing red area that is exposed to the outside of the ship?
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