Eternal_Freedom wrote:They were in the middle of combat, discussing a potential ally's engine performance would be absurd even for early-TNG Data.
Except for the Tin Man example above where they do indeed have exactly that conversation as a warbird attacks? It doesn't take a Shakespeare. "I thought the Enterprise was quicker than warbirds!" "They must be redlining their engines." But that's fine. There's no evidence the Valdores were suffering engine damage, parsimony suggests they're not.
If anything, the Enterprise was the one that had been running at 'emergency warp' when they left Romulus.
Wing Commander MAD wrote:
Why are we trying to generalize performance for an entire empire's propulsion based on the speed of specific vessels from one or two specific incidents?
Given that D'Deridexes were the only Romulan warships seen for a very long time, I don't see how that's unreasonable; D'Deridexes pretty much defined the Romulan navy.
It could be that the Galaxy class is faster than the D'Deridex. Though, it could also be that there was some other issue that caused the warbird to have to overload its engines.
Even if there was nothing wrong with the warbird in question, it simply could be that the D'Deridex is designed with a lower max speed due to some other performance constraint outweighing top speed for that design. I really do not think we can make a general conclusion about Romulan warp speeds unless we have a quote that lends itself to that. Its not like we have a quote like this:
I'd welcome counter-examples from Star Trek.
Prometheus Unbound wrote:
Surprise about what? Their arrival (presumably coming in cloaked at warp) was a surprise to everyone. Shinzon didn't know what time she left Romulus and the Enterprise and crew would have absolutely no way of knowing. I don't think either party would particularly care how they're there, especially Enterprise. And as someone else pointed out, they're in the middle of a battle and a bit distracted.
Shinzon had at least spoken to her on the senate floor not long before. And again, it only takes a single line if they wanted to establish that as a fact.
From a production perspective, the intention of John Eaves and others was that the Valdore was to be equipped with new secondary nacelles to be used when cloaked (
source) at one point, presumably because they were aware of previously established warp/cloak problems and wanted this ship not to have them, though that sadly didn't make it to the final product.