Estimating the Size of The Bre'el Moon

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Mith
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Post by Mith » Thu Jun 05, 2008 9:44 pm

Roondar wrote:I'm not going to dispute that, but you must at the very least agree with me that taking 90 photon torpedoes to the shields is not standard performance. That is to say, nowhere in TNG+ have we ever seen any starship take anywhere near that and still be in one piece.
Ah, but this is also YEARS after TOS, and The Changling occured years before even Undiscovered Country. I suggest that rather assuming something is wrong, that we rather consider that perhaps UFP torpedoes had considerably advanced at that point. If you recall in Enterprise's Dark Mirror episodes, the Constitution class was easily able to take what the NX class dished out, but her own weapons weren't able to one hit kill the NX, and in fact, took a couple torpedo shots. That would suggest that there wasn't much advancement in weapon yields from Enterprise to TOS, which makes sense since the war with the Klingons and Romulans might have forced them to focus on more crude weapons such as nuclear weapons, or even build tri-cobalts. Hence why we see a major refit for the Enterprise in ST: The Never Ending Movie. In fact, the Enterprise A was stated to be horribly outdated by Star Trek III, which is why it would have taken the beating it did from a Bird of Prey, while the Excelsior didn't take any hull damage at all.
Heck, in DS9 most starships could only take five to ten hits (torps or otherwise) max* before they'd be in serious trouble or plainly disabled/destroyed.
I suggest that during TOS, shields were more advanced than most weapons, and in a later part of the series, the opposite is true.
*) As seen in the many 'war' episodes such as Sacrifice of Angels and Favor the Bold, some ships even get blown up/get their shields disabled/pierced in that sequence on the very first hit they take!
True, but they were also at war, so perhaps not all ships were at full strength, this would go double for UFP ships, which were stated to have trouble even getting to the fight.
Couple this with a 300% increase in power to the shields when using warp power and you're still way, way short of 90 torpedoes. For TNG+ ships of course.

This is without considering other problems that arise when the E-D could take 90+ photon torpedoes to the shields in one blast yet still consider a single photon torpedo threathening. In fact, if you need that many of them to pierce the shields one wonders why the hell Federation ships even carry them (and why they don't use warp power for their shields in every scenario that calls for them).
As stated above, I suggest that at this point in TOS, shield technology was at its peak against weapon technology, which is why the Plasma Torpedo was considered such a powerful weapon, even when disapated it nearly took down the Enterprise's shields, and clearly took down the shielding of an outpost. That would be considerably stronger than both photon torps and the Changling drone.

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Post by Roondar » Thu Jun 05, 2008 10:02 pm

Mith wrote:
Roondar wrote:I'm not going to dispute that, but you must at the very least agree with me that taking 90 photon torpedoes to the shields is not standard performance. That is to say, nowhere in TNG+ have we ever seen any starship take anywhere near that and still be in one piece.
Ah, but this is also YEARS after TOS, and The Changling occured years before even Undiscovered Country. I suggest that rather assuming something is wrong, that we rather consider that perhaps UFP torpedoes had considerably advanced at that point. If you recall in Enterprise's Dark Mirror episodes, the Constitution class was easily able to take what the NX class dished out, but her own weapons weren't able to one hit kill the NX, and in fact, took a couple torpedo shots. That would suggest that there wasn't much advancement in weapon yields from Enterprise to TOS, which makes sense since the war with the Klingons and Romulans might have forced them to focus on more crude weapons such as nuclear weapons, or even build tri-cobalts. Hence why we see a major refit for the Enterprise in ST: The Never Ending Movie. In fact, the Enterprise A was stated to be horribly outdated by Star Trek III, which is why it would have taken the beating it did from a Bird of Prey, while the Excelsior didn't take any hull damage at all.
Heck, in DS9 most starships could only take five to ten hits (torps or otherwise) max* before they'd be in serious trouble or plainly disabled/destroyed.
I suggest that during TOS, shields were more advanced than most weapons, and in a later part of the series, the opposite is true.
*) As seen in the many 'war' episodes such as Sacrifice of Angels and Favor the Bold, some ships even get blown up/get their shields disabled/pierced in that sequence on the very first hit they take!
True, but they were also at war, so perhaps not all ships were at full strength, this would go double for UFP ships, which were stated to have trouble even getting to the fight.
Couple this with a 300% increase in power to the shields when using warp power and you're still way, way short of 90 torpedoes. For TNG+ ships of course.

This is without considering other problems that arise when the E-D could take 90+ photon torpedoes to the shields in one blast yet still consider a single photon torpedo threathening. In fact, if you need that many of them to pierce the shields one wonders why the hell Federation ships even carry them (and why they don't use warp power for their shields in every scenario that calls for them).
As stated above, I suggest that at this point in TOS, shield technology was at its peak against weapon technology, which is why the Plasma Torpedo was considered such a powerful weapon, even when disapated it nearly took down the Enterprise's shields, and clearly took down the shielding of an outpost. That would be considerably stronger than both photon torps and the Changling drone.
I must admit this sounds like a reasonable explanation, although I'll add that we only really have Enterprise and TNG+ photon torpedo power estimates which will limit what we can say about the TOS episode's shields.

On one hand it'd be pretty weird if the photon torpedoes dropped in strength during TOS, on the other hand many instances in which the various Enterprises et. al. where in danger of having their shields brought down the yields seemed much lower than the 17000+ MT suggested for said TOS episode.

This goes double for any kinetic impact, where the numbers are usually not even in the double MT range.

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Post by Mith » Thu Jun 05, 2008 10:11 pm

Roondar wrote:I must admit this sounds like a reasonable explanation, although I'll add that we only really have Enterprise and TNG+ photon torpedo power estimates which will limit what we can say about the TOS episode's shields.

On one hand it'd be pretty weird if the photon torpedoes dropped in strength during TOS, on the other hand many instances in which the various Enterprises et. al. where in danger of having their shields brought down the yields seemed much lower than the 17000+ MT suggested for said TOS episode.
True, it is strange that torpedoes were left in low levels of firepower, but this theory of their weapon technology not growing far since Enterprise isn't just unfounded, it took multiple torpedo hits in the Enterprise Mirror series to take down an NX, despite there being a hundred year advancement in technology. I think it has more to do with the fact of the Federation focusing on defense rather than offense (their desire to be peaceful does tend to mean that they will focus on defensive abilities rather than their offensive ones). Furthermore, the Romulans weren't much of an issue for most of the TOS era, and although the Klingons were a threat, it wasn't always direct, and there was only one fleet combat during TOS. However, superior shielding would allow the Federation starships to take more attacks, and then dish them out longer with their own weapons. Given how tough the Constitution class is rumored to be, it does make sense.
This goes double for any kinetic impact, where the numbers are usually not even in the double MT range.
True, but we also have episodes where they can fly a shuttle into the corona of a star via a "special" shield program, or where they can increase power to the shields just by adjusting said things, or somethings. Star Trek is fairly inconsistant, but for the most parts I try to ignore what cannot be explained. Kinetic impacts that considerably damage shielding when high level MT level torpedoes do not is one of those.

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Post by Cocytus » Thu Jun 05, 2008 11:06 pm

That's a great explanation, Mith. It does indeed seem that there is a general reluctance on the part of the Federation to really develop military technologies to be an effective deterrent. More often than not, technologies develop in response to military conflicts. Case in point: the metaphasic shield (that's what you're talking about Mith. It was featured in "Suspicions" and "Descent.") One wonders why a shield technology which was clearly superior to then current shields wouldn't be made the standard on every starship. One must wonder, furthermore, what kind of power Starfleet would have if the advanced technologies they have but don't use were employed, like the transphasic torpedoes and ablative hull generator (Endgame) the aforementioned metaphasic shield, the phase cloak (Pegasus) etc. Wow.

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Post by Mith » Thu Jun 05, 2008 11:26 pm

Cocytus wrote:That's a great explanation, Mith. It does indeed seem that there is a general reluctance on the part of the Federation to really develop military technologies to be an effective deterrent. More often than not, technologies develop in response to military conflicts. Case in point: the metaphasic shield (that's what you're talking about Mith. It was featured in "Suspicions" and "Descent.") One wonders why a shield technology which was clearly superior to then current shields wouldn't be made the standard on every starship. One must wonder, furthermore, what kind of power Starfleet would have if the advanced technologies they have but don't use were employed, like the transphasic torpedoes and ablative hull generator (Endgame) the aforementioned metaphasic shield, the phase cloak (Pegasus) etc. Wow.
Exactly, and given how in TOS, the Klingons even signed a peace treaty with the UFP (forced upon both sides by some uber race), advancement in weapons would not have been a main focus. Although, I think hostilities might have gone up around the Motion Picture, given the complete re-design of the Constitution.

Although for Descent and Suspicions, they were going to make the adjustments, but Geordie hadn't apparently finished the program, but the fact that they didn't rush it into full scale production is strange.

In a way, it makes sense why Section 31 would think that the Dominion War was healthy to some extent; it really gave the UFP a wake up call. Remember that in Undiscovered Country, they mouthballed the fleet, and the admirals said that Starfleet's science and exploration department would be more than enough to defend the Federation. Sure, they had the Cardassian War at some point before TNG, but I think that was more of a minor war with some terrible events, which is perhaps why Starfleet put the Nebula and Galaxies into service, adding more firepower to their exploration fleet. After Wolf 359 and the rising problems with the Dominion, we saw much more advanced starships, each building on former designs to enhance combat performance (Akira, Prometheus, Defiant, Sovereign ect.).

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Post by Cocytus » Fri Jun 06, 2008 12:18 am

Geordie didn't invent the metaphasic shield, the Ferengi Dr. Reyga did. Geordie wasn't even on the Enterprise in Descent, he was busy being tortured by Data under Lore's control.

Given Admiral Haden's attitude in "The Wounded," the Cardassian War was likely a serious conflict, though not one which threatened to destroy the Federation as a whole. It was a conflict over territory which resulted in the DMZ and the Maquis separatist movement. I think you're right that the Nebula and Galaxy classes were developed in response to this conflict, which ended before either class saw service. This explains the gulf between the Cardassian ships and the Enterprise and Pheonix. The Federation could afford to sit back and develop new ship classes. The Dominion War, by contrast, threatened to destroy the Federation entirely, and so they threw absolutely everything they had into battle, regardless of how outdated it was. TNG shows us Mirandas relegated to courier and cargo service, yet they come back in DS9 as combat ships. We do see a large number of Akira's (which is one of my absolute favorite starships) though as others have pointed out, the lower NCC numbers (in the 60,000 range) point to a development phase which began before the Galaxy and Nebula classes (The USS Galaxy's registry is NCC-70637) and well before the Borg incident.

When you think about it, the Federation has spent the better part of the last 40 years at war. The first Cardassian conflict in the 2340s, with the 2350s being relatively peaceful, then the Borg incident, the return of the Romulans, the Klingon Civil War, and isolated conflicts all well-documented during the 2360s, then the war ravaged 2370s, starting with the changeling infiltration, the Klingon-Federation war and the Dominion war. The Federation Council undoubtedly endured a lot of partisan bickering between Starfleet admirals ready to develop better weapons, and Federation officials desperate to preserve their core ideals even in the face of the conflict. I suspect the case much of the time is that Starfleet overplays military conflicts, while the Federation's officials downplay them. Witness the conversation between Jaresh-Inyo and Admiral Leyton in "Homefront."

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Post by Mith » Fri Jun 06, 2008 1:06 am

Cocytus wrote:Geordie didn't invent the metaphasic shield, the Ferengi Dr. Reyga did. Geordie wasn't even on the Enterprise in Descent, he was busy being tortured by Data under Lore's control.
I am aware of this, however, it was stated in the episode that the Enterprise D did not have a standard metaphasic shielding, and that Geordi had still been adapting the technology before the conflict ever came into being, which is what I was refering to.
Given Admiral Haden's attitude in "The Wounded," the Cardassian War was likely a serious conflict, though not one which threatened to destroy the Federation as a whole. It was a conflict over territory which resulted in the DMZ and the Maquis separatist movement.
I rather think it's because of just the lack of military experience on Starfleet's part. Remember that their only threats had been the Romulans and the Klingons. The Klingons became allies, and the Romulans went into self-imposed exile. The Cardassians themselves don't seem to be that far past the TOS era in terms of technology advancment. They still use large phaser banks as TOS did, and their ships were easily overpowered by a single Nebula class starship that lacked a weapons pod (advance sensor pod). Not to mention how Dukat nearly wet himself when he discovered that Tom Riker had one of the most heavily armed starships and was going to take it into Cardassian territory. True, the Defiant is a major threat, but we saw the Defiant easily deal with most ships, even the uprated Obsidian Order Keldon class, which were supposed to be top of the line, as opposed to the Destroyer design of the Defiant class. And that was after some advancements. I suspect that their Galors were likely on par with Miranda classes, which were apparently being used as light cruisers for the UFP, which had Excelsior (likely heavy cruisers) and Ambassadors (despite the claim that they're so pathetic looking, I suspect it was stronger than the Excelsior by a considerable margin).

With the lack of UFP military training, and the major focus for Cardassian military training, I suspect this reduced the UFP advantage, not to mention the lack of a fleet (remember it got mouthballed in ST:6), it would have made a short war very bloody indeed.
I think you're right that the Nebula and Galaxy classes were developed in response to this conflict, which ended before either class saw service. This explains the gulf between the Cardassian ships and the Enterprise and Pheonix. The Federation could afford to sit back and develop new ship classes.


Exactly, the Fedeation had taken the basic idea of the Ambassador and began on the idea of a really advanced explorer that could also beat the crap out of any Cardassian ship. This ship had much larger phaser arrays, more smaller ones, and two torpedo tubes which could easily fire up to five in less than a second. The Nebula was likely a scaled down version designed to serve as a less grand idea, going for practicallity rather than a showey display of uber strength.
The Dominion War, by contrast, threatened to destroy the Federation entirely, and so they threw absolutely everything they had into battle, regardless of how outdated it was. TNG shows us Mirandas relegated to courier and cargo service, yet they come back in DS9 as combat ships. We do see a large number of Akira's (which is one of my absolute favorite starships) though as others have pointed out, the lower NCC numbers (in the 60,000 range) point to a development phase which began before the Galaxy and Nebula classes (The USS Galaxy's registry is NCC-70637) and well before the Borg incident.
Exactly, the UFP likely began pulling out all the dated ships that had been mouthballed after ST:6, upgrated them, and then shoved them onto the front lines. Naturally, we see that even Mirandas aren't a match for the updated Galors (or at least under fire from other Dominion ships), and the Excelsiors serving as light cruisers. The Galaxy class became dreadnoughts (likely armed with stronger torps and shielding, to compensate for their relatively slow manuverbility), the Akira was a more manuverable form of the Nebula, the Steamrunner and Norway seemed like the new cruisers, and the Defiant was the destroyer of the group. Naturally you'd have really powerful warships like the Soveriegn, or the Prometheus. The rest was basically cannon fodder, there to soak up damage and toss out a little more. Nothing more, nothing less.
When you think about it, the Federation has spent the better part of the last 40 years at war. The first Cardassian conflict in the 2340s, with the 2350s being relatively peaceful, then the Borg incident, the return of the Romulans, the Klingon Civil War, and isolated conflicts all well-documented during the 2360s, then the war ravaged 2370s, starting with the changeling infiltration, the Klingon-Federation war and the Dominion war. The Federation Council undoubtedly endured a lot of partisan bickering between Starfleet admirals ready to develop better weapons, and Federation officials desperate to preserve their core ideals even in the face of the conflict. I suspect the case much of the time is that Starfleet overplays military conflicts, while the Federation's officials downplay them. Witness the conversation between Jaresh-Inyo and Admiral Leyton in "Homefront."
Again, the Cardassians weren't much of a threat that it required the UFP to really get off its ass and push out a real fleet, instead just sloving the problem with two new ship classes, a couple of kit bashes, and outdated starships. The Borg represented a big problem, but until Wolf 359, there was no real tactical abilities on the Borg. Sure it overshadowed a Galaxy class ship, but overshadowing someone elses dreadnought isn't nearly as intimidating as smacking around 39 starships (after defeating said dreadnought), and then easily penetrating a well defended system at the heart of your territory.

After that, the UFP seemed to snap to attention and started the Defiant pathfinder project, where they tossed in the prototype destroyer with heavy armor, pulse phaser cannons, enhanced deflector dish, and a warpcore about 1/5th the size of the Galaxy's, but capable of putting out the same amount of energy. Then they got lazy again.

During the conflicts with the Cardassians and the Dominion, they began taking the parts they did right from the Defiant and start buidling newer ships, while fixing what they did wrong. Hell, even the Defiant class itself was a big success.

And then you have to take into account that the UFP likely didn't have dedicated shipyards made to build ships in a time of war, nor the manpower.

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Post by Mike DiCenso » Fri Jun 06, 2008 1:07 am

Roondar wrote: On one hand it'd be pretty weird if the photon torpedoes dropped in strength during TOS, on the other hand many instances in which the various Enterprises et. al. where in danger of having their shields brought down the yields seemed much lower than the 17000+ MT suggested for said TOS episode.
There cannot have been any real drop in torpedo firepower during TOS as opposed to a previous era, otherwise what the Constitution class Defiant did in ST:ENT's "In a Mirror, Darkly, Parts I & II" is all rather meaningless. We saw with all her weapons clear superiority over even the largest and most powerful starships of the 22nd century.

Roondar wrote: This goes double for any kinetic impact, where the numbers are usually not even in the double MT range.
There aren't very many examples of KE impacts against shields in Trek. Did you have a particular example or set of examples in mind?
-Mike

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Post by Cocytus » Fri Jun 06, 2008 1:44 am

I respectfully disagree about the Cardassians, Mith. They might not have been one of the three main powers in the Alpha Quadrant, but they were by no means a century behind everyone else. No species a century behind everyone else builds massively advanced interplanetary cruise missiles of the type seen in VOY "Dreadnaught." Yes, B'Elanna tinkered with the computer, but it had quantum torpedoes, advanced shields and the sophisticated evasive computer before B'Elanna began her modifications. Admiral Haden seemed quite serious when he stated "we are NOT ready for a new sustained conflict."

And the entire fleet was not mothballed in Star Trek 6. That was one female captain's overreaction to Spock's speech which said specifically that the Klingons were negotiating for the "dismantling of our space stations and starbases along the Neutral Zone," to which the C in C replies that their scientific and exploratory expeditions would be unaffected. In other words, the entire fleet was never an issue. They were talking about dismantling a few key strategic bases. Given the general attitudes about Klingons espoused by most present at the meeting, it's not surprising that the aforementioned captain responded to the proposal with incredulity. After all, it would hardly make sense to inactivate the entire fleet.

Furthermore, if the Akira class's NCC numbers are accurate, and there's no reason to doubt them, it would indeed put their development before either the Galaxy or Nebula class, making them in all probability the first design Starfleet came up with after the Cardassian War. For the record, both the Sabre and Streamrunner vessels have NCC numbers in the 60000 range as well.

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Post by Mith » Fri Jun 06, 2008 2:42 am

Cocytus wrote:I respectfully disagree about the Cardassians, Mith. They might not have been one of the three main powers in the Alpha Quadrant, but they were by no means a century behind everyone else. No species a century behind everyone else builds massively advanced interplanetary cruise missiles of the type seen in VOY "Dreadnaught." Yes, B'Elanna tinkered with the computer, but it had quantum torpedoes, advanced shields and the sophisticated evasive computer before B'Elanna began her modifications. Admiral Haden seemed quite serious when he stated "we are NOT ready for a new sustained conflict."
Figures it came from Voyager. And frankly, that seems odd since never once did the Cardassians deploy quantum torpedoes during their war, or that specific weapon ever again.

And furthermore, yes, they are well behind in terms of firepower. When the common level starship of your neighbor is able to take a joy ride through your territory, you are behind in technology. By a great deal.

And by the way, evidence outweighs what she claims; all UFP ships have shown vastly superior firepower in terms of conflict with the Cardassians.
And the entire fleet was not mothballed in Star Trek 6.
I never said the ENTIRE fleet.
A MILITARY MAN
Bill, are we talking about
mothballing the Starfleet?


CinC
I'm sure our exploration and
science programs would not be
affected,
but the facts speak for
themselves, Captain.

ADMIRAL DONALD
I must protest. To offer the
Klingons a safe haven within
Federation space is suicide.
Klingons would become the alien
trash of the galaxy. And if we
dismantle the fleet, we'd be
defenseless before a bellicose
people with a foothold on our
territory.
The opportunity which
presents itself here is to embargo
trading, force them to run through
their own resources faster, and
bring them to their knees. Then
we'll be in a far better position
to dictate terms.
They were talking about dismantling their fleet. That sounds like reducing the number of ships by a vast amount, which would make sense. That explains why the Cardassians were as big of a threat as they were, and why in the end of BoBW, there was a statement of the fleet being back up in less than a year. Given how 39 ships doesn't come close to holding the title of "fleet", then I'd say they were refering to restoring their older ships into service, as well as moving in new models.
That was one female captain's overreaction to Spock's speech which said specifically that the Klingons were negotiating for the "dismantling of our space stations and starbases along the Neutral Zone," to which the C in C replies that their scientific and exploratory expeditions would be unaffected. In other words, the entire fleet was never an issue. They were talking about dismantling a few key strategic bases. Given the general attitudes about Klingons espoused by most present at the meeting, it's not surprising that the aforementioned captain responded to the proposal with incredulity. After all, it would hardly make sense to inactivate the entire fleet.


As mentioned above, you do not need to put away your entire fleet, but rather reduce the number. Hence the idea of amassing a fleet at the edges of Cardassian space, leading into two UFP sectors was seen as an aggressive act. Because they were increasing the power of their military power. In a move for peace, retirng the fleet would free up funds for other services (which was mentioned), and it wouldn't reduce the number of ships for basic defense and exploration.
Furthermore, if the Akira class's NCC numbers are accurate, and there's no reason to doubt them, it would indeed put their development before either the Galaxy or Nebula class, making them in all probability the first design Starfleet came up with after the Cardassian War. For the record, both the Sabre and Streamrunner vessels have NCC numbers in the 60000 range as well.
Then sadly, there must be a number issue, because the Akira and the Steamrunner classes weren't seen until long after the Nebula and the Galaxy. Unless you wish to explain as to why in 7+ years, we didn't see a single one of these ships? I suppose they could have built them as an idea of warships against the Cardassins, and later shelved and updated, but it seems like a silly idea.

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Post by Cocytus » Fri Jun 06, 2008 3:34 am

Where did that script quote come from? In the film, Admiral Cartwright (is Donald his first name) cuts off the C in C after "but." The captain who uttered the mothballing comment is a woman. And you've left out the key portion of the quote.

Spock: "Last month, at the behest of the Vulcan ambassador I opened a dialogue with Gorkon, chancellor of the Klingon High Council. He proposes to commence negotiations at once."

Cartwright: "Negotiations for what?"

Spock: "The dismantling of our space stations and starbases along the Neutral Zone. And end to almost 70 years of unremitting hostility which the Klingons can no longer afford."

Space Stations and Starbases. A series of key strategic installations is what is really being discussed here. The Federation's pulling out from the Klingon border, turning it over to the Klingons. The female captain responds with "are we talking about mothballing the Starfleet?" The answer is no. Considering that Cartwright was involved in the plot to assassinate Gorkon, I doubt seriously we can take anything he says as true, rather more racist fearmongering, I should say. "Dismantling the fleet" sounds just like what it is, dismantling the fleet. Not "dismantling the Ninth Fleet," or "dismantling the fleet along the Klingon border."

Furthermore, the fact that the example I cited came from Voyager does not automatically invalidate it. The Cardassians built that missile. That's canon fact. From a species a century behind everyone else? Unlikely. You're not comparing "common level" starships here. You're comparing common level Cardassian ships with the newest, most powerful Federation starship classes, the Galaxy, the Nebula, and the Defiant. Hardly seems fair does it. Try Galors against a genuinely century old design i.e. the Miranda. Then watch the DS9 battles again. And its not just the missile. I point you to Tears of the Prophets. Those Cardassian weapons platforms, (which Cardassia developed under its own power as evidenced by Weyoun's disapproval of the late activation "It pains me to say this but you Cardassians are proving to be quite a disappointment,") tear right through many of the largest and most powerful Alliance starships. Damar even rattles off the weapons complements of "1000 plasma torpedoes," to which Weyoun replies "I like them," as if he had no prior knowledge of their design or armament, which seems unlikely if the Dominion had been directly involved in their design. I have no problem with the notion that Federation starships are more powerful than their Cardassian counterparts. But they're hardly a century ahead.

And lastly, your theory about a design delay makes perfect sense. In the presence of sustained conflict, the Federation will turn to a wartime production mode, pulling older vessels out of mothballs and sending everything to the front lines while beginning design of newer ships. But when the war ends and peaceful exploration again becomes the main objective, combat oriented vessels are shelved in favor of constructing scientific starships. The Akira is a combat starship, pure and simple. And if you're looking for precedent, look no further than the Defiant herself. From DS9 "The Search":

Sisko: "The Defiant was the prototype, the first ship in what would have become a new Federation battle fleet."

Dax: "So what happened?"

Sisko: "The Borg threat BECAME LESS URGENT. Also, several design flaws cropped up during the ship's shakedown cruise, so Starfleet abandoned the project."

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Post by Mith » Fri Jun 06, 2008 5:06 am

Cocytus wrote:Where did that script quote come from? In the film, Admiral Cartwright (is Donald his first name) cuts off the C in C after "but." The captain who uttered the mothballing comment is a woman. And you've left out the key portion of the quote.

Spock: "Last month, at the behest of the Vulcan ambassador I opened a dialogue with Gorkon, chancellor of the Klingon High Council. He proposes to commence negotiations at once."

Cartwright: "Negotiations for what?"

Spock: "The dismantling of our space stations and starbases along the Neutral Zone. And end to almost 70 years of unremitting hostility which the Klingons can no longer afford."
Perhaps the attribution is wrong, however, my point is there; they intended to mouthball the fleet. As in, reduce it from the size that a war-fleet migh have, and down towards a more reasonable number. For example, if five thousand starships are enough to patrol UFP boarders and systems, respond to emergiences, perform diplomatic functions, and exploration, they would reduce the fleet to that size, rather than keep say ten thousand. Because there would be no reason to have ten thousand starships taking up resources. That's absurd.
Space Stations and Starbases. A series of key strategic installations is what is really being discussed here. The Federation's pulling out from the Klingon border, turning it over to the Klingons. The female captain responds with "are we talking about mothballing the Starfleet?" The answer is no. Considering that Cartwright was involved in the plot to assassinate Gorkon, I doubt seriously we can take anything he says as true, rather more racist fearmongering, I should say. "Dismantling the fleet" sounds just like what it is, dismantling the fleet. Not "dismantling the Ninth Fleet," or "dismantling the fleet along the Klingon border."


I never said they would toss out an entire fleet, or it altogether. This is absurd since we see they still have a fleet in TNG. What I said was that they dismantled their fleet from the point of it being a threat to the Klingons, but kept enough to protect themselves to a reasonable extent. That being defense, scientific study, and exploration still being maintained by the remaining ship. Mass production of warships would stop, as well as devoting a great deal of credits to producing better ships and weapons.
Furthermore, the fact that the example I cited came from Voyager does not automatically invalidate it. The Cardassians built that missile. That's canon fact. From a species a century behind everyone else? Unlikely.


What is this behind everyone else? The Federation, Klingons, and the Romulans are the most advanced powers in the Alpha Quadrant area. They are clearly not the weakest, but they are vastly behind in weapons and ship technology, as seen by the fact that most of their weapons are late 23rd UFP equal weapons. That is not to say their firepower is limited to that ( I should have been clearer), as a Miranda clearly cannot overpower a Galor.
You're not comparing "common level" starships here. You're comparing common level Cardassian ships with the newest, most powerful Federation starship classes, the Galaxy, the Nebula, and the Defiant.
Please, that's hardly true. While the Nebula may have started out more advanced and powerful, the delay mass production of later ships allowed more modern designs to be fitted into them, as we can clearly see major leaps and bounds in their design. What's more, the Nebula in The Wounded did not have a weapon's pod, which is the bulk firepower of the Nebula itself. And yet it dominated the Galors easily.
Hardly seems fair does it. Try Galors against a genuinely century old design i.e. the Miranda. Then watch the DS9 battles again.
Please, the Mirandas are HOW old? They were what, heavy cruisers during the time of the Constitution Refit? During the Cardassian-UFP war, I suspect at best they were use as light cruisers, and years later with Dominion upgrades, you think I'd consider they were capable of matching a Galor in even combat? Not likely. The Mirandas were the biggest symbol of cannon fodder on the bloody show.

And its not just the missile. I point you to Tears of the Prophets. Those Cardassian weapons platforms, (which Cardassia developed under its own power as evidenced by Weyoun's disapproval of the late activation "It pains me to say this but you Cardassians are proving to be quite a disappointment,") tear right through many of the largest and most powerful Alliance starships. Damar even rattles off the weapons complements of "1000 plasma torpedoes," to which Weyoun replies "I like them," as if he had no prior knowledge of their design or armament, which seems unlikely if the Dominion had been directly involved in their design. I have no problem with the notion that Federation starships are more powerful than their Cardassian counterparts. But they're hardly a century ahead.
First of all, producing a super-weapon isn't tough. The Empire built the Death Star. The only unrealistic part about it is that the Cardassians had armed it with Quantum Torpedoes, despite the fact they've only ever used plasma torpedoes. But that rant aside, the weapon had to cost a fortune to make, as we see no example of it during the Dominion War.

As for the weapon platforms, that isn't so much a leap of technological ability, but so much a clever use of networking power from a large power plant on a shielded asteroid. Plasma torpedoes themselves have always been a powerful weapon, and with Dominion resources, obtaining powerful plasma torpedoes is child's play. As for suggesting that the Dominion had no hand in it, this is doubtful, surely they were not in charge of this, but they would have had the technology that the Cardassians needed to pull this idea off.
And lastly, your theory about a design delay makes perfect sense. In the presence of sustained conflict, the Federation will turn to a wartime production mode, pulling older vessels out of mothballs and sending everything to the front lines while beginning design of newer ships. But when the war ends and peaceful exploration again becomes the main objective, combat oriented vessels are shelved in favor of constructing scientific starships. The Akira is a combat starship, pure and simple. And if you're looking for precedent, look no further than the Defiant herself. From DS9 "The Search":

Sisko: "The Defiant was the prototype, the first ship in what would have become a new Federation battle fleet."

Dax: "So what happened?"

Sisko: "The Borg threat BECAME LESS URGENT. Also, several design flaws cropped up during the ship's shakedown cruise, so Starfleet abandoned the project."
Of course, although this was after a great deal of delayed peace with no worthy enemies for the UFP to fight against. A few hundred new ships of the Akira, Nebula, and Galaxy class would have surely been enough to devistate the Cardassian fleet in addition to the older UFP ship models.

I forsee that the UFP won't just disarm as quickly, due to the continual threat of the Dominion, and the occasional attack from the Borg Collective. As for the new UFP war fleet, I suspect that given the recent news on the Akira and such, the Defiant, Sovereign, and Prometheus class are going to be the shinning leaders of that fleet, while the rest of the fleet just recieves upgrades to keep up. The Excelsiors are going to become the new Mirandas, and the Nebulas are likely going to be pushed to the working horse class, due to their multi-stage capabilities.

But as for the Cardassians, their technology is significantly older, and their advancement (note, not firepower per say) really is about a century behind in most cases, simply due to the lack of imagination the Cardassian goverment had imposed upon them for so long (great discipline, but no imagination for the most part).

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Post by Roondar » Fri Jun 06, 2008 9:28 am

Mike DiCenso wrote:
Roondar wrote: On one hand it'd be pretty weird if the photon torpedoes dropped in strength during TOS, on the other hand many instances in which the various Enterprises et. al. where in danger of having their shields brought down the yields seemed much lower than the 17000+ MT suggested for said TOS episode.
There cannot have been any real drop in torpedo firepower during TOS as opposed to a previous era, otherwise what the Constitution class Defiant did in ST:ENT's "In a Mirror, Darkly, Parts I & II" is all rather meaningless. We saw with all her weapons clear superiority over even the largest and most powerful starships of the 22nd century.
Like I said, a drop would be odd. But like I also said, there are ample examples of the E-D (etc) being seriously in danger at the hand of attacks/environmental threats that score much, much lower than 17GT.

(Case in point: at 17GT shielding the E-D would be more than capable of hanging out in a stars corona for quite some time without even a hint of trouble, there would be no reason for metaphasic shields)

To make this clear: I'm not arguing in favor of a drop, but I'm not going to blindly accept 17GT+ shielding either because there is evidence that 24th century Federation starships can't actually take so much punishment.
Roondar wrote: This goes double for any kinetic impact, where the numbers are usually not even in the double MT range.
There aren't very many examples of KE impacts against shields in Trek. Did you have a particular example or set of examples in mind?
-Mike
I should have been clearer, but what I meant is along the folowing lines:

If the Enterprise-D (or defiant) had 17GT+ shields versus kinetic impacts, several episodes and at least one tactic stop making sense.

The tactic being ramming - at the relative speeds most ST combat takes place the kinetic energy resulting from such impacts (even from the rather heavy ST ships) would not even be near 100MT, let alone 17GT.

Some examples:

There is a TNG episode in which the E-D makes a nifty flight through an asteroid field. At 17GT+ kinetic shields they would not have really had to be so careful - at that speed* they could have bumped into asteroids up to 500m in radius without any ill effects. However, they do take great care not to hit anything.

I'll admit that this is smart behaviour, but really - if you wish to get somewhere in a hurry and your starship can shrug of collisions with boulders that are larger than itself I'd not really go through the trouble of avoiding all the small ones. Especially as the energy involved in the collisions with smaller asteroids is much, much lower due to the cubic nature of volume calculations.

*) I've taken a speed of 10 km/sec for the calculation, which is really much faster than they actually move through that field. The asteroids are assumed to be granite. The radius of asteroids that are no threat to the E-D goes up significantly if the speed drops. At 1 km/sec (which is closer to the thruth but probably still too high) they could take asteroids up to 2300m in radius without shieldfailure. That is really quite big.

There is a DS9 episode in which the Defiant tries to destroy a comet. They fail due to sabotage and are faced with the task of attempting to get the pieces through the wormhole with a shuttle. At GT+ kinetic shields they could have easily just nudged the comet out of the way without any risk to the ship, no need for phasers or time consuming alterations to them. Which sounds like a much nicer and less risky thing to do to me.

Lastly, the E-E did do that ramming of the Scimitar which went straight through it's still active shields. And that was calced to be a rather low-key event, energy wise. Certainly not in the GT range.

The same thing goes in reverse for weapons - if shielding is up into the double digit GT range, we'd expect photon torpedoes to cause a great deal more damage to unshielded or natural objects than they actually appear to do.

(Incidently, this is also why Starwars shielding figures into the tera/petaton range are nonsense - the empire let a freaking asteroid field stop them from getting at the rebels. At that shielding level they could have just followed them in at full speed without any ill effects. No need to shoot anything down either)

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Post by Mith » Fri Jun 06, 2008 1:28 pm

Roondar wrote:Like I said, a drop would be odd. But like I also said, there are ample examples of the E-D (etc) being seriously in danger at the hand of attacks/environmental threats that score much, much lower than 17GT.
Most of which are exceptionally absurd, since we know that Enterprise era weapons would be much stronger than those low end examples.
(Case in point: at 17GT shielding the E-D would be more than capable of hanging out in a stars corona for quite some time without even a hint of trouble, there would be no reason for metaphasic shields)
The problem wasn't power. The problem was the configuration of the shield that made it less effective in dispersing CONSTANT heat and radiation that you would have froma corona, rather than a short burst from say, a photon torpedo.
To make this clear: I'm not arguing in favor of a drop, but I'm not going to blindly accept 17GT+ shielding either because there is evidence that 24th century Federation starships can't actually take so much punishment.
And yet the 23rd cenutry can? Hell, even the Enterprise NX could take that kind of weapon damage to their hull.

I should have been clearer, but what I meant is along the folowing lines:

If the Enterprise-D (or defiant) had 17GT+ shields versus kinetic impacts, several episodes and at least one tactic stop making sense.

The tactic being ramming - at the relative speeds most ST combat takes place the kinetic energy resulting from such impacts (even from the rather heavy ST ships) would not even be near 100MT, let alone 17GT.

Some examples:

There is a TNG episode in which the E-D makes a nifty flight through an asteroid field. At 17GT+ kinetic shields they would not have really had to be so careful - at that speed* they could have bumped into asteroids up to 500m in radius without any ill effects. However, they do take great care not to hit anything.
Well, you don't just go gung ho in running through an asteroid field, or the remains of a planet, but they weren't exactly all that concerned either.
I'll admit that this is smart behaviour, but really - if you wish to get somewhere in a hurry and your starship can shrug of collisions with boulders that are larger than itself I'd not really go through the trouble of avoiding all the small ones. Especially as the energy involved in the collisions with smaller asteroids is much, much lower due to the cubic nature of volume calculations.
Also, the deflector dish pushes asteroids out of the way, so they may have not of been all that careful. Also, save for one case of an asteroid being too dense to enter for a torpedo (which was speeding away at high speeds), they have never shown a great need for zooming through an asteroid field.
*) I've taken a speed of 10 km/sec for the calculation, which is really much faster than they actually move through that field. The asteroids are assumed to be granite. The radius of asteroids that are no threat to the E-D goes up significantly if the speed drops. At 1 km/sec (which is closer to the thruth but probably still too high) they could take asteroids up to 2300m in radius without shieldfailure. That is really quite big.

There is a DS9 episode in which the Defiant tries to destroy a comet. They fail due to sabotage and are faced with the task of attempting to get the pieces through the wormhole with a shuttle. At GT+ kinetic shields they could have easily just nudged the comet out of the way without any risk to the ship, no need for phasers or time consuming alterations to them. Which sounds like a much nicer and less risky thing to do to me.
Of course you're going to have your low-yield episodes. But later we're told that a single Defiant class ship has enough firepower to reduce a planet to slag, but yet here they lacked the firepower to destroy it.
Lastly, the E-E did do that ramming of the Scimitar which went straight through it's still active shields. And that was calced to be a rather low-key event, energy wise. Certainly not in the GT range.
Shinzon had lowered the shields because he was being a cocky twit. Picard even mentioned that to Shinzon just before he ordered the ramming. It sounds like to me that Shinzon had lowered his shields and was prepared to beam Picard off, but wanted to gloat first. I mean after all, his enemy was out of torpedoes, phasers at 3%, shields had failed, and the hull had several breaches, not to mention that impulse was shot.
The same thing goes in reverse for weapons - if shielding is up into the double digit GT range, we'd expect photon torpedoes to cause a great deal more damage to unshielded or natural objects than they actually appear to do.
True, but we get a lot of strange figures from their weapons, which have variable yields to begin with.
(Incidently, this is also why Starwars shielding figures into the tera/petaton range are nonsense - the empire let a freaking asteroid field stop them from getting at the rebels. At that shielding level they could have just followed them in at full speed without any ill effects. No need to shoot anything down either)
Indeed.

But look, I'm not aiming for say, even uber gigaton shielding, but I am rather pointing out that there have been clear examples of their ships easily surviving a great deal of damage. Even if we say that 90 photon torpeodes in TOS were a megaton each, that's still be a fairly high number, up to 360 just for a old style Constitution.

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Post by Cocytus » Fri Jun 06, 2008 7:57 pm

Mith wrote:I never said they would toss out an entire fleet, or it altogether. This is absurd since we see they still have a fleet in TNG. What I said was that they dismantled their fleet from the point of it being a threat to the Klingons, but kept enough to protect themselves to a reasonable extent. That being defense, scientific study, and exploration still being maintained by the remaining ship. Mass production of warships would stop, as well as devoting a great deal of credits to producing better ships and weapons.
Alright, that makes sense. We knew they would dismantle the bases along the Neutral Zone. If they also inactivated the ships those bases supported, that would leave the entire frontier unguarded, justifying Cartwright's opposition to giving the Klingons a "foothold in our territory."
Mith wrote:What is this behind everyone else? The Federation, Klingons, and the Romulans are the most advanced powers in the Alpha Quadrant area. They are clearly not the weakest, but they are vastly behind in weapons and ship technology, as seen by the fact that most of their weapons are late 23rd UFP equal weapons. That is not to say their firepower is limited to that ( I should have been clearer), as a Miranda clearly cannot overpower a Galor.
You yourself said they don't appear to be far beyond the TOS era level of technology. Now if we include the films, TOS spans about 30 years. But the series itself runs from 2266 to 2269, 100 years before the beginning of TNG.
Mith wrote:Please, that's hardly true. While the Nebula may have started out more advanced and powerful, the delay mass production of later ships allowed more modern designs to be fitted into them, as we can clearly see major leaps and bounds in their design. What's more, the Nebula in The Wounded did not have a weapon's pod, which is the bulk firepower of the Nebula itself. And yet it dominated the Galors easily.
It dominated a single warship, which may or may not have been Galor class, and a series of defenseless supply ships and monitoring stations. And yes, I think the Nebula is clearly a powerhouse as far as Federation starships go. Not to the extent that the Galaxy is, but similar in capabilities since it obviously shares so many components. The weapons pod, as far as I know, contains only additional torpedo launchers. I've never seen any phaser arrays on it. The standard Pheonix-type Nebula has two torpedo launchers already (the rear one, and a front one directly above the deflector. We saw it fire in First Contact.) And it took an entire wing of Cardassian destroyers (most likely Galors, since Dax refers to them as destroyers in SoA) to destroy the USS Honshu in "Waltz." The fact that the Pheonix trounced a Cardassian sector should not be taken as indication of Cardassian weakness but of the Nebula's strength. Regarding the Galors, I'd say they were designed to match the Excelsior class, which would have been the mainstay of the fleet in the 2340s, with only a few of the newer Ambassadors in service. Against larger ships they would operate in groups, which is probably exactly the impetus for the design of the Akira, a maneuverable starship with massive torpedo firepower which could readily engage multiple targets simultaneously. I suspect they shelved it because it had little use outside of a conflict situation. Then the first Borg incident occurred, and Akiras were much more common by the time the second Borg incident rolls around. By the Dominion War they are commonplace.
Mith wrote:First of all, producing a super-weapon isn't tough. The Empire built the Death Star. The only unrealistic part about it is that the Cardassians had armed it with Quantum Torpedoes, despite the fact they've only ever used plasma torpedoes. But that rant aside, the weapon had to cost a fortune to make, as we see no example of it during the Dominion War.
I suppose that depends on what your definition of "tough" is. Regardless, the missile establishes a precedent for what Cardassia can do when it really sets its mind to something.
Mith wrote:As for the weapon platforms, that isn't so much a leap of technological ability, but so much a clever use of networking power from a large power plant on a shielded asteroid. Plasma torpedoes themselves have always been a powerful weapon, and with Dominion resources, obtaining powerful plasma torpedoes is child's play. As for suggesting that the Dominion had no hand in it, this is doubtful, surely they were not in charge of this, but they would have had the technology that the Cardassians needed to pull this idea off.
The Dominion clearly wasn't directly involved in their construction, since such delays from Dominion personnel would never have been tolerated by the Vorta. That the Dominion supplied the Cardassian Empire, severely damaged by its recent war with the Klingons, the raw materials to do so I can accept.
Mith wrote:But as for the Cardassians, their technology is significantly older, and their advancement (note, not firepower per say) really is about a century behind in most cases, simply due to the lack of imagination the Cardassian goverment had imposed upon them for so long (great discipline, but no imagination for the most part).
Your last point is excellent. Given the highly structured, formal nature of Cardassian society, its probable new advancements are met with speculation and scorn, and work their way into the mainstream slowly. And if we look at it in terms of different fields, then yes the Cardassians are certainly behind in some areas, and on par in others. Your point about firepower is also well taken, though with energy weapons, power is a function of reactor output, and since Cardassian phasers can pose a threat to Federation starships and the reactors are in gerenal the same size, their reactor tech isn't all that far behind. Certainly their hand weapons are often more powerful, as Kira says in "Return to Grace," further evidence that their power generation abilites aren't that far behind Starfleet's. Their replicators can produce specialized defensive weapons("Civil Defense") something we've yet to see a Federation replicator do. Certainly their transporter tech appears on par. Their optalythic data rods are analagous to isolinear chips. I think the issue here is not one of technological development but one of application. Your point about their "lack of imagination" is correct, I feel.

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