There was a fairly large crack in the lower housing, presumably caused when Khan attacked after beaming Kirk, Carol and Scotty to the Enterprise brig. It's more visible in the set photos than in the movie itself.
There was a fairly large crack in the lower housing, presumably caused when Khan attacked after beaming Kirk, Carol and Scotty to the Enterprise brig. It's more visible in the set photos than in the movie itself.
Depends on the series. When we first met the Borg in TNG, it was stated that their ships were completely decentralized in construction -- there was no "primary core" for any component, because every function was distributed uniformly throughout the cube. Thus, it was impossible to neutralize any of the cube's systems without destroying most or all of the cube. However, Voyager forgot this
First Contact, too. They handwave it away by having Picard tell Data to "trust" him, but Data's objection is valid.
That was a coolant leak, which dropped them out of warp earlier in the movie.
If it wasn't Khan's attack on the already-helpless Enterprise that damaged the warp core, Spock's reaction to Kirk's sacrifice would be somewhat random and unjustified.
There was a graphic made for the movie that had information on the warp core. It can be seen at this site - http://www.inventinginteractive.com/2013/05/16/star-trek-into-darkness/
Some of it is readable, and I suppose for those more educated than me might make some sense.
A question here. A person can access the status of the warp core. If the warp core is out of alignment, shouldn't there be means to bring it in alignment, via console, without exposing a crew member to radiation? Or, as this is the future, wouldn't there be machines that could repair the core and bring the connectivity ports into alignment?
My rationalization is that it's not needed for the thrusters, but for the impulse engines - that they couldn't make orbit on thrusters alone, and that the impulse reactor was taken out by the damage to the ship. They needed the warp core online to drive the impulse engines in lieu of it.Kirk's percussive maintenance was probably a stopgap -- enough that they could reactivate thrusters (although, why the hell did they need the warp core to power the thrusters?) and return to orbit, but if they'd tried going to warp, they probably would've blown up.
If I remember correctly,in TWOK, Spock enters the reactor room. The pedestal contains the DiLithium crystals. He must have reoriented the crystals.
Does the interior of JJ-Prise's warp core remind anyone of the Death Star reactor?
You can't check the oil or jumpstart the battery in an automobile flailing around as clumsily as Spock did in that scene. Yet you suggest that Nimoy's plausibly miming some kind of emergency maintenance on an FTL engineering system.
If I remember correctly,in TWOK, Spock enters the reactor room. The pedestal contains the DiLithium crystals. He must have reoriented the crystals.
Bullshit.
You can't check the oil or jumpstart the battery in an automobile flailing around as clumsily as Spock did in that scene. Yet you suggest that Nimoy's plausibly miming some kind of emergency maintenance on an FTL engineering system.
That's the worst kind of excuse making.![]()
Does anybody know what procedure the script said Spock was doing?
My rationalization is that it's not needed for the thrusters, but for the impulse engines - that they couldn't make orbit on thrusters alone, and that the impulse reactor was taken out by the damage to the ship. They needed the warp core online to drive the impulse engines in lieu of it.
Does anybody know what procedure the script said Spock was doing?
In contrast, what we got in STID was in many ways the exact opposite of that. Rather than vaguely and suggestively doing nothing sensible inside a pedestal that's way too small for the gloves he's wearing, Kirk gets up on something bigger than he is and puts his whole body into it; at least we can see on some level that something is being moved back into place.
The impulse deck was wrecked. Auxiliary power was out. Thus, no thrusters.
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