The fact that torpedoes regularly have very good shields indicates otherwise.mr.dark wrote:A target which wont be manouvering, the deathstar does not evade. what i meant is that the photon torpedo wont be evading either, admittedly because the federation have conveniently forgotten the art of point defence but the fact stands
The fact stands that these are harder targets than the incoming Rebel fighters due to smaller size and faster speed; by the time their profile is as large as the fighters when they started evading, they are a very small fraction of a second from impact.
Because they actually do, in everything from surface strikes made on planets from orbit to ships at long range.Explain how the torpedoes go nowhere near that fast in the series unless being used in warp against warp targets.
It is one of the curious points that photon torpedoes, once fired, rarely require more than a minute to reach the target, but tend to take the same measured several beats regardless of range. In the case of one of the longest range and time incidents, they are traveling clear through a star ("Half a Life") at relativistic speeds.
Given the dozens of examples (including both every long range attack and every space-to-surface attack) which would leave a Death Star's guns a fraction of a second for targeting those torpedoes, I advise you to dig up some evidence showing a flight time of minutes for a range of hundreds of kilometers or less if you wish to support your argument. I believe there are none, however.
Actually, there's no sign they did a decel burn before hitting the shield. It may well be that the shield did it for them.Oh i'd also note that the matching velocities was to pass through the shield without going splat, unless photon torpedoes have ever been shown to decelerate and then accelerate again then photon torpedo attacks against the deathstar arent gonna work.
Information is usually lacking. Of course, in ROTS, the Invisible Hand takes damage from Ani and Obi before its shield is down, as Mr. Oragahn has noted, and the Falcon successfully latches onto a shielded ship with an audible clamor in TESB.You know the deathstar is using planetary shields which arent hullhugging like ship shields right? on account of being a spacegoing moon. So let us have an example of a capital ship with shields up being attacked and suffering damage from a fighter or fighters.
We have innumerable cases of the fiery explosions on the surface of capital ships, including in the opening exchanges of ROTJ, in which TIEs engaged Rebel ships, as I originally pointed out. In most of these cases, the ships in question should be shielded.
There are several dozen listed on the main website regarding range. Click on the individual series tabs to see quite a few.I've bolded the relevant word for you.
Regarding the power of photon torpedoes relative to phasers, you might start with the introduction of "photonic torpedos" in ENT, or the comparison between a phaser and photon attack on a planetary shield in "Whom Gods Destroy."
The Klingon hull is discussed in "Judgment," not "Descent." In "Descent," the hull temperature is given explicitly (and shields are indeed up).Also do we have proof that in descent the relevant vessel was unshielded?
This is a small 22nd century Klingon ship with a not particularly thick hull. Requiring a focused and sustained strike on the same spot for some time is looking like a significant fraction of a megaton per cubic meter - and this is leagues behind 23rd century Klingon and Federation ships.Same phaser cannon that is 5TW? ie, 1 kiloton, so two orders of magnitude too small for your megatons statement.