You know damn well that doesn't count.Akiraprise said:
*Cough* Endgame *Cough*exodus said:
Voyager never destroyed any cubes, they did hit and run.
Some phlegm must be caught in there, sorry.
Transphasic torpedoes rock.![]()

You know damn well that doesn't count.Akiraprise said:
*Cough* Endgame *Cough*exodus said:
Voyager never destroyed any cubes, they did hit and run.
Some phlegm must be caught in there, sorry.
Transphasic torpedoes rock.![]()
Certainly. Okay, let's ignore the E-D and use the E-E and the fleet of ships that got annhilated by the single borg cube. The E-E is a later model ship, a much larger ship, and a ship designed for much more beligerant duty than Voyager. Other ships that were equally new and shiny got fucking owned by a single borg cube. Even still in today's world the principal advanced in technology are pretty much modular. Its easy to equip a ship built 25 years ago with better amunition and faster computers (The principal advances). With replicators retrofitting is even easier. Therefore the First Contact fleet would be at a later point of technology than Voyager, cut off from Federation technology.exodus said:
If technology in the real world advances every 5 years or less, you mean to tell me with thousands of worlds with the Federation(and growing) they couldn't make a better ship in 8 years? Don't you think the US military would be developing better defensive systems after 9/11?
Bullshit. Sure they could make the replacement parts, but it would time and energy intensive. Imagine building a shuttle, warp core, deflector dish, or EPS junction. They don't have a replicator big enough for that. They would have to build them peice by peice. I imagine a shuttle hull would need to be a single peice of metal. Many overhauls would require stopping the ship and being able to work on the outer hull. That's why starbases exist. We see much evidence of the Enterprise D stopping at starbases. While Voyager might be able to acomplish this with space suits, it would take for fucking ever.exodus said:
Voyager didn't need replacement parts, replicators recycle EVERYTHING on a molecular level.(explained in every Trek show since TNG)
The Borg have access to far more humans in far more important positions that 7 of 9 was in. They can manage a large force instantaneously. Their weapons and shield are years beyond what the Federation has. A single ship was able to destroy an entire fleet. The Borg act like complete dumbasses. They never seem to decide "Well, okay, let's take this bitch down." I don't care how much technology 7 of 9 has, Voyager can't take down four borg cubes. I have a hell of a fucking time beleiving it can take down one. The Hansens intel is like 20 fucking years old. The Borg can change themselves much faster than Voyager can, and decades old intel will be of no use. 7 of 9's intel will be increasingly obsolete very, very fast. The Borg maintain a huge empire and are contantly assimilating and researching. VOyager is a frigate no where near any sort of freindly base.exodus said:
Voyager never destroyed any cubes, they did hit and run. Tactical advantage to the Borg came thanks to Seven of Nine, combined with aquiring the Hanson's recorded information(Raven & Dark Frontier) & well as tactical information aquired during the very start of "Dark Frontier". If someone can't get around an adversary after recieving all that information, then they're pretty stupid.
Becuase there wasn't any other use for a principal character that B&B were contractually obligated to use? I don't care how well Neelix can barter. Voyager requires supplies of a very high technology level, and any society that can give them those supplies likely has replicators too. Voyager has very limited resources and would very quikcly run out of valuable things to trade. Trade is all well and good, but there needs to be something producing value.exodus said:
Voyager had Neelix who was their man in charge of trade & bartering. Thru him & his skills they navigated the terran. Why do you think Janeway made him Ambassidor for Voyager?(Macrocosm)
Let's reverse the scenario to be more accurate. Imagine 19th century pioneers trying to cross the Soviet Union in the 1970s, a USSR that's wants them either arrested (assimilated) or dead. Sure there are plenty of disillusioned people to give them help and plenty of places to hide, but the Soviet Union is far larger, has an enormous military, and is 100 years ahead of them in technology. Similarly the pioneers did not have a very large peice of machinery that requires advanced replacement parts and fuel. The engine of a wagon eats grass. If an axel breaks, well, its not the end of the world to replace it. On a modern ship when it comes time to replace turbine generator it has to sit in a specialized facility for a length of time.exodus said:
What Voyager went thru is no differant than the early pinoneers that traveled across country in the US by wagon train and used a Native American as their guide and negotiator.
First of all by turbine I meant the warp core. The warp core is way too fucking big to just pop out of a replicator. It would require exotic metals (They say molecular, not atomic), complex machinery that would be too large to pop out of a replicator, a lot of time to test and make sure it is running, and replacing it would require at the very least to stop the ship for a few days. We know that ships require routine maintaince, that's why starbases exist. Do you think the UFP spent a huge amount of effort and time building those facilties if a ship could do it itself? Plus, if such complex parts can come flying out a replicator like its trivial don't you think during the dominion war the UFP would be spitting Sovreign Class warships out of an enourmous replicator like a machine gun?exodus said:
^^Check out the episodes I gave you in my reply, they back up everything I said. When you do, then we can continue the conversation and address those issues too because I do have answers and back up proof stated within episodes too.
I will however address some of it, Voyager is not a turbine generator it's the equvilant of a flying computer. A computer if it's broken doesn't take weeks to fix. Why have a crew of Engineers onboard everyship if they still requires visiting a special facility to fix? If one of two people take a few hours to a day to fix a computer, how much less time does a whole team of 15 or more take?
Your the one who doesn't. First of all it is very clearly molecular not atomic. That means if you want something made of metal you need to put metal into the system. We don't see Voyager ripping off parts of the hull to build new shuttles, do we? It doesn't mean pressing a button and fancy things come out. There are clearly limitations. Again, we don't see starfleet just spitting out ships in a time of war from some gigantic replicator. An industrial replicator was mentioned as being very valuable in DS9. If replication was free like you seem to think they could just spit them out of a larger replicator. We also see the ENT-D going to starbases for supplies like photon torpedoes. I don't remember any evidence the replication technology has been revolutionized since the ENT-D was launched.exodus said:
BTW, did you not hear how every season how they stated nobody else in the Delta Q. has replicators? Once again, Voyager doesn't require advanced technology from other civilations they have a team of Engineers onboard. Did you not see Be'Lanna, Harry & Seven continually creating new devices and technology? They build a slipsteam drive, develope a skeletal transporter lock & a brand new shuttle craft too name a few. I also see you don't comprehend what recycling on a molecular level means either or the concept of recycling in of itself.
We hear dialog that they are bringing in several fleets. A fleet is the largest formation in a navy. It takes a long time to get from the neutral zone and we see the cube has taken moderate damage. However of these fleets we see maybe about 9 or 10 ships still fightirng. That means the Borg have destroyed 20-40 ships unless a fleet is significantly smaller in Starfleet, which I doubt. First Contact Starfleet is more advaned than Voyager. It has been a few years since Voyager got lost and they haven't established contact with earth yet.exodus said:
BTW, we never saw how big the fleet was in "First Contact" and we do know the E-E was at the Neutral Zone at the start of the attack. Did you estimate the time it takes from the Neutral Zone to Earth? The Starfleet ships we saw fighting the Borg, even the Defiant were still holding up against one cube when the E-E arrived. They held up far better that the images we saw from BOBW.
david g said:
One of the commonplaces of VOY criticism is that they denatured and defanged the Borg. Perhaps the Borg were overused; perhaps they became less scary. But for one thing, those were inevitable results as the race became more familiar.
I always figured such pieces were smaller components put together to create one larger one.Tralis said:[/i
A warp core casing or a deflector dish are very, very large, much too large to come out of a replicator. Even if they had a larger replicator on board there is no way they have one large enough to make a deflector dish. Again, if a replicator is so flexible why are ships built rather than replicated?
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