Yes, the hatch was. But I'm refering to the intial explosion - the Enterprise hits (not approaches closely but actually hits - they're contact explosives after all) one of the mines very early in the episode. At that stage they didn't have their hull polarized or any of their defenses turned on. They where not at warp either so any effect of the deflector was mitigated.Mr. Oragahn wrote:I though the hatch used to protect from that 0.25 KT mine was polarized, which if I'm correct, the debut in the shielding department?Roondar wrote:Well, material strength in the ST universe is obviously a great deal above what we have today. The NX-Enterprise took a quarter-kiloton contact explosive to it's hull (when all defenses where offline - and that ship has no Structural Integrity Grid) and the resulting hole was quite, quite anemic compared to what we'd expect from 250.000 KG of TNT vs real world materials. And that was against a 300 years older ship in a line that is far less advanced than what the Borg have.
They get a nice, sizable chunk, of the ship blown out. But the size of the hole is far too small for a quarter-kiloton contact explosive on something that consists mainly of air. This shows us that the NX has a relatively strong hull, all things considered.
If you want I can see about finding a picture?
Seems like a good point, but I was actually refering to earlier in the battle when the Photons and Phasers of the UFP fleet hit the -presumably unshielded, per dialog- cube with very little effect.But the torps were hitting inside the ship at that point. Perhaps the Borg focused internal force fields (shields and SIF) onto that section, but it was not enough.Then again, I suppose stuff like the Borg equivalent of Structural Integrity fields could provide a lot of the answer.
(Don't forget: the movie suggests -but does not outright state-, per Data's damage report on the cube, that the Borg have lost shields prior to the part of the battle we see)
Which is good, because that reinforces my point - you can't use the physical prowes of Species 8472 against indoor walls to guage outer hull strengths. For all we know the inner walls are mostly protecting against energy weapons.By the damage caused by the fire onto that very spot, compared to what the torps and beams did to any other outer section of the hull, I'd be tempted to think that the inside is not as good.As to the walls being beaten by Organic limbs, there's two reasons this is problematic as a comparisom.
The first is that we have no idea if the wall is made from the same stuff as the outer hull.
That would be quite logical considering boarding parties tend to use them quite a lot. They could also be more for structural strength or making compartiments/rooms instead of needing to be rugged to resist combat. I mean with SIF, shields and a tough other hull you don't need to build every wall inside your ship to be really strong.
Yeah, re-reading it you're right. <shrug> it's not neccesary to be able to explain the situation anyway so I'll forget about posting it if you will :PWow, that's a rather huge stretch.The second being that we have no idea wether Species 8472, being from 'fluidic space' - a bizzaro dimension outside of realspace, are really that strong. Or that they just have special 'sci-fi magic' built in that makes them appear to be a whole lot stronger than they really are (i.e. they don't actually brute force the wall but use an aspect of their weird extra-dimensional state to breach it).
Sorry, don't buy it at all.
I'll be sure to rewatch that scene as I don't recall it at all.When Kim and co go on a Cube and Kim is hit by one of these aliens, beamed back into Voy and has that 8472 snort growing through his nose or something.(on a sidenote, where does this happen exactly - my memory of species 8472 has one of them stuck over on Voyager without being nearly so strong)