Roondar wrote:
It makes very little sense for the M/AM core to contain all of (or nearly all of) the AM you have at any time. That is a very dangerous way of doing things (not to mention a bit of a silly thing to claim to begin with - it's like saying your gasoline engine will have all the gasoline you have in the tank in it when it starts running hot, or your nuclear power plant having all the uranium you have in store in when it starts to melt down. Neither are true).
Clearly the whole rod thing DOES carry a large amount of AM. The episode in Voyager where Banana ejects one and the Voyager races away from the thing should be a proof. Or should we ignore it, because writers had no advisory and were playing the lucky pot shot, and sometimes what they wrote made sense, other times not?
Besides, we know they have seperate -and nigh indestructable, IIRC not a single one has ever breached- antimatter pods where they'd store the bulk. Also, please note that we don't see a small explosion followed by a bigger one. We see one big one.
I am not the one who decided that jettisoned warp cores would still build up towards overload and explode later on like a bomb, even in space.
The warp core is a big long rod in many UFP ships, either horizontal or vertical.
I wasn't saying that the AM was stored in the intermix chamber or whatever, but present in tanks as part of the whole rod-assembly that the warp core is. Think of the term more as "power plant" than a given specific piece.
A large and single explosion doesn't really contradict this. It merely says that a large amount of fuel reacts all at once.
Thats a weak argument though, they where working on a -for all intents and purposes- hi-def mapping chamber. Not say, the shield generator or the phaser array. It makes sense they'd use a pretty bog-standard conduit to power it, not some massive uber conduit (you don't connect your radio directly to the high voltage lines either!).
A radio that would need power rerouted to it manually, while the ship's mundane power conduits would be channeling petawatts?
This pretty much proves that this fancy radio was clearly a sucker for power, so my argument stands, even if I, myself, don't see why the lab needed so much power.
It also makes sense that the powerlevels in that conduit wouldn't be much above what is nominally needed. Especially since nothing special was happening on Voyager in the mean time.
A ship that does nothing special doesn't require the power of one 15F42 warhead per second!
It would also demonstrate a poor energy efficiency.
This is a big thing. Even if Harry was rerouting energy, that conduit would not be suddenly swamped with a much higher than average level of power.
Why not? They're apparently powering a radio that needs a manual modification --instead of pressing a console's icon-- to get some extra energy for that supposedly non-power-hungry lab, while the ship is supposedly presently idle, and yet it's farting a hundred Little Boys (or more) per second down there in engineering?
Uh-huh.
And if that was the only way to deal with things that just means he rerouted all that energy away from it's normal destination and you still end up with that figure as a reasonable amount of energy to flow about a small part of a pretty much idle ship.
Besides, even if it's a 'high throughput' conduit -which remains to be seen, we've heard really high energy quotes in ST during idle moments before-, it's still only going to be a fraction of the total energy grid and hence only a fraction of the total power output of the ship at that time. Unless you want us to believe the rather inane idea that UFP engineers route most of their total energy capacity over a single wire.
You know, the same UFP engineers who claim they'd feel uneasy without at least three (primary and backup) systems running for the same job. You really think that engineers who value redundancy that much would lead all their energy through a single conduit?
It's not much about where the power flowed and how much of it there was, but about the reasons why such power was needed.
Really, look at your arguments. You're telling me that the astrometrics lab is like a radio and you don't need large amounts of power for that (despite the fact that for some reason, they had to bring power manually to that part of the ship).
Then you also repeatedly insist that the ship is idle.
And that thing still needs megatons of energy per second?
It would be better to know what they were trying to do with the astrometics labs.
You seem hellbent on lowering any form of powergeneration for ST, don't you :P
Seriously, I don't see the problem here. 5 TW is well in the lower range of other named power quantities on the various ST shows.
I don't have the context for that "5 TW for the dish" reference, and it's very likely that they needed it then for a good reason. But 5 TW is still nowhere 5 PW or more (since that was one power conduit).
To be blunt:
You have zero proof that your assertion (all these numbers just happen to be high ends and only for a small amount of time) is true.
There's equally no proof that the ship the size of the love boat would need petawatts while twisting its thumbs in the cold ass end of nowhere.
There is in fact plenty of evidence in the ST canon that UFP ships generate downright scary amounts of energy.
That they can do it for a given amount of time, for a specific purpose, yes.
Ignoring or trying to rationalize all of those away reeks of bias more than trying to find out what the 'true limits' are.
And the contrary could be called fanboyism.
It's exceptionally unlikely, in my view, that all the ST powergeneration numbers stated on the show just so happen to be flukes, false, outliers or only peak-power moments.
Specific purposes or tests, that works well enough. It's like that figure from Data. Millions of terwatts or something? A figure thrown around casually, while the E-D was idle as well, I suppose.
Oh yeah, our ship is presently generating the energy of hundreds of Tsar Bombas per second, just for the sake of it. It's also the amount of energy our food processor, our lighting neon complex and casino matrix require. Our ship usually generates a billion times that amount of energy when battle ready. Maybe you wish to tour the rest of our ship? Can I offer you a drink of fresh Remola juice?
l33telboi wrote:Mr. Oragahn wrote:Or these systems could require much less power. Unless there's a solid figure somewhere, it's rather useless.
Uh, my post is in response to an incident where a crewman gives a solid figure for power.
Oh wait, I see. You mean the energy is stored there, as part of something that helps creating a whole artificial gravity. It's more like a capacitor system.
Well I wonder how this would work without considerable energy loss.
Now, I don't remember if it was in this thread, but here's the quote about the hypermatter reactor that was to be tried on an ISD-II:
Death Star wrote:
The Battle Lance.
His nephew, Hora Graneet, had been a navy spacer on the Imperial-class Star Destroyer Mark II class vessel, which had been selected for a shakedown cruise testing one of the improved prototype hypermatter reactors. Tenn didn't know the specifics of what had happened, and didn't have anything close to the math needed to understand it anyway. He knew that hypermatter existed only in hyperspace, that it was composed of tachyonic particles, and that charged tachyons, when constrained by the lower dimensions of realspace, produced near-limitless energy. How this "null-point energy" had become unstable he didn't know. He only knew it had been powerful enough to turn an ISD-II and its crew of thirty-seven thousand people into floating wisps of ionized gas in a microsecond.
The quote is vague enough to make it unclear about how new hypermatter reactors were.
On a sidenote, it's always good to remember this, regarding the Death Star and what it may have been capable of, from a cursory look at its heavy weapon components:
Death Star wrote:
"Yon construction, upon which so many of our fellows have been conscripted to menial labor, along with thousands and thousands of slaves, droids, and private contractors, not to mention army, navy, and Imperial engineers, is the destination for this colossal apparatus."
"Yeah-so?"
"Well, let me enlighten you. Beams of coherent particles, such as electrons, positrons, and the like, as well as amplified photon emissions, are often focused with large magnetic rings. Let us postulate that one could, in this fashion, generate a weaponized beam with enough force to blow a large asteroid apart with a single blast."
"Is there such a thing?"
"In theory, yes, though it requires a power source so large as to be impractical to perambulate, even on a Star Destroyer. But," Balahteez continued, raising one phalange in emphasis, "aboard something the size of, say, a moon, one could easily install and house such a mechanism."
"You're saying the battle station they're building up there is going to be that large?"
"Oh, my, yes. Easily. But this is not the point. The magnetic ring being built by Dybersyne is much, much larger than would be needed to focus such a beam, even a beam of such astonishing power."
Ratua frowned. "You've lost me."
The smuggler smiled. "Let us say, for the sake of argument, that the battle station under construction is large enough to hold, oh, six or eight such weapons, as well as a hypermatter reactor that could power a small planet. And that it is possible to focus all of this energy into a single beam-by the largest and most powerful magnetic ring ever made." He looked expectantly at Ratua.
"Milking mopak," Ratua said softly.
"Indeed, indeed. I see you comprehend at last. Not so dull and boring after all, eh?"
Ratua shook his head. That was for sure. If the Empire could make something like that work, there wouldn't be any place a Rebel force could hide-the superweapon could, with a single blast, destroy whole continents. Maybe even whole planets. Just knowing such a thing existed, it seemed, would be enough to keep the peace. You certainly wouldn't want to see it coming into your system with malign intent . . .
Earth's world energy consumption: 174 petawatts (1.740 e17 W), plus or minus 3.5%.